Mars Rover Begins Climb Out of Vast Crater
By SPACE.com Staff posted: 26 August 2008 05:43 pm ET
NASA's Opportunity rover is slowly but surely hauling itself out of a vast
Martian crater
after nearly a year plumbing the interior for secrets of the red planet's
ancient past.
Opportunity will take the same route it used to enter Victoria crater on Sept.
11, 2007,
after a year of scouting from the rim. Engineers want the rover to make a
graceful exit
after seeing an electric current spike in its left front wheel — a reminder of a
similar spike
that occurred when its robotic twin Spirit lost use of a front right wheel in
2006.
"If Opportunity were driving with only five wheels, like Spirit, it probably
would never get
out of Victoria Crater," said Bill Nelson, a rover mission manager at the Jet
Propulsion
Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif. "We also know from experience with Spirit
that if
Opportunity were to lose the use of a wheel after it is out on the level ground,
mobility
should not be a problem."
The rover drove close to the base of a cliff that makes up part of the crater
rim, called
"Cape Verde," and snapped detailed images of rock layers reaching 20 feet (6
meters) tall.