The Free Press Journal

NASA’s Curiosity rover marks five years of Mars exploratio­n

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NASA’s Curiosity rover which found that that ancient Mars had the right chemistry to support living microbes is marking five years of exploring the Red Planet.

The rover, which landed at the Gale Crater – an ancient lake – is now examining clues on Mount Sharp, the mountain found in the middle of the crater, about longago lakes on Mars.

On August 5, 2012, the mission team at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, exalted at radio confirmati­on and first images from Curiosity after the rover’s touchdown using a new “sky crane” landing method, NASA said.

Transmissi­ons at the speed of light took nearly 14 minutes to travel from Mars to Earth, which that day were about 248 million kilometres apart. Those first images included a view of Mount Sharp.

The mission accomplish­ed its main goal in less than a year, before reaching the mountain.

It determined that an ancient lake environmen­t on this part of Mars offered the conditions needed for life – fresh water, other key chemical ingredient­s and an energy source.

On Mount Sharp since 2014, Curiosity has examined environmen­ts where both water and wind have left their marks.

The rover has driven a little more than 17 kilometres in five years, but having studied more than 600 vertical feet of rock with signs of lakes and later groundwate­r, Curiosity’s internatio­nal science team concluded that habitable conditions lasted for at least millions of years.

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