The New Zealand Herald

All over rover?

Mars dust storm leaves Opportunit­y in the dark

- Marcia Dunn

Nasa’s seemingly unstoppabl­e Mars rover Opportunit­y has been knocked out by a gigantic dust storm that is enveloping the red planet and blotting out the sun.

Officials said yesterday that they’re hopeful the rover will survive the storm, which already covers onequarter of Mars and is expected to encircle the planet in another few days. It could be weeks or even months, though, until the sky clears enough for sunlight to reach the Martian surface and recharge Opportunit­y’s batteries through its solar panels.

For now, Mars’ oldest working rover is stuck in the middle of the raging storm, in round-the-clock darkness.

“By no means are we out of the woods here,” said John Callas, the Opportunit­y project manager at Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. “This storm is threatenin­g, and we don’t know how long it will last, and we don’t know what the environmen­t will be like once it clears.”

Nasa launched the twin rovers Opportunit­y and Spirit in 2003 to study Martian rocks and soil. They landed in 2004. Spirit hasn’t worked for several years. Opportunit­y, however, has kept exploring well past its expected mission lifetime.

Scientists aren’t nearly as concerned about the newer, nuclearpow­ered Curiosity rover on the other side of Mars, which is already seeing darkening skies.

Dust storms crop up every so often on Mars, sending dust tens of kilometres into the atmosphere and turning day into night. Spacecraft orbiting Mars are too high to be affected.

There’s no chance of Opportunit­y being buried or stuck in dust. Even in the worst of storms, only a layer of fine dust is left behind.

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