San Francisco Chronicle

Rover collects first rock sample

- By Kenneth Chang Kenneth Chang is a New York Times writer.

NASA’s Perseveran­ce rover on Mars has confirmed the successful collection of its first rock sample.

“One down, a lot more to go!” Kenneth A. Farley, professor of geochemist­ry at the California Institute of Technology and the mission’s project scientist, said in an email.

On Monday night, NASA announced that the rover had sealed the tube that contains the rock core, which is slightly thicker than a pencil, and put it away for safekeepin­g in its belly. That and other collected samples will be dropped to the ground to be collected by another spacecraft. They will eventually be ferried back to Earth, helping scientists study the mysteries of the red planet in much the same way that lunar samples from the Apollo and Soviet missions helped advance understand­ing of the moon.

For decades, planetary geologists have wanted to study rocks from another planet. They have done that with pieces of Mars that were blasted into space by meteor impacts and later passed Earth’s path and landed as meteorites. But with Martian meteorites, scientists had no idea where the rocks originated — intriguing pieces from a jigsaw puzzle but no opportunit­y to find the other pieces.

With the Perseveran­ce samples, scientists will know exactly which rocks the samples came from, and the rover will have performed a detailed study of the surroundin­g geology.

The rover drilled the core from a flat, briefcases­ize Mars rock nicknamed Rochette last week. In the first pictures that the rover took of the collection tube, the rock sample could be easily seen.

Rochette looks to be a piece of hardened lava, which can be precisely dated. Thus, scientists will be able to determine how old this boulder is, and it helps pin down the ages of lower, older layers.

One of the key tasks for Perseveran­ce, which arrived on Mars in February, is to collect rocks and soil that will eventually be brought back to Earth by another mission so scientists can exhaustive­ly study them using state-ofthe-art instrument­s in their laboratori­es. Scientists hope to collect more than 30 samples from a variety of locations in Jezero crater, a landing site that was chosen because scientists on Earth felt an ancient river delta along the crater rim was a promising target for fossilized microbial life, if it ever existed.

Perseveran­ce is collecting the rock and soil samples but has no way to deliver them back to Earth. That will await the future mission, which is still being designed.

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