On day 37 of its Martian mission (known as "sol 37")015 Archives the Perseverance rover zapped a curious, holey rock with a laser 10 times.
It wasn't for sport. The laser is part of the rover's SuperCam, which looms atop the car-sized robot like a crow's nest on a ship. From distances of over 20 feet away, a laser strike concentrates the power of one million light bulbsonto rocks and soil, producing flickers of light. These flickers are excited atoms, and the SuperCam analyzes this light to glean if a rocky target might have preserved past signs of Martian life — like certain organic materials microbes may have once munched on.
A holey, peculiar rock certainly struck the Perseverance science team as a place of interest. What type of rock is it? Why is it so holey?
"We thought we better check it out," Roger Wiens, a planetary scientist at Los Alamos National Laboratory who leads the SuperCamteam, told Mashable. "We’re trying to investigate the different types of rocks we see."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Without zooming in, it's difficult to spot the laser marks. The line of laser marks can be seen in the red circle below:
The rover has beamed back the results from the laser zapping, and Wiens said the Perseverance team is studying the rock's composition. Could it be a meteorite from somewhere in the solar system? Is water responsible for eroding the holey rock? Might it be a volcanic rock?
"The team has formulated many different hypotheses about this one -- is it something weathered out of the local bedrock?" NASA tweeted. "Is it a piece of Mars plopped into the area from a far-flung impact event? Is it a meteorite? Or something else?"
See Also: The Martian sounds recorded by the Perseverance rover, so far
NASA's Perseverance team isn't ready to release their conclusions quite yet, as they're still discussing the possibilities. But there's certainly going to be much more rock zapping in the weeks, months, and likely years ahead. Right now, Perseverance is in the middle of its landing spot, the Jezero Crater, a place NASA says was once flooded with water.
Soon, Perseverance will make a slow, careful journey to a large dried-up river delta, where microbial life could have once survived on Mars in wet, clay soils — if life ever existed, anyway.
"We’re about 1.5 miles away from the delta, as the Martian crow flies," said Wiens.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Trump delays TikTok ban for another 75 days
Who's who in 'Dune: Prophecy': Every character you need to know
Snapchat introduces location alerts for parents and their teens
NYT Connections hints and answers for November 15: Tips to solve 'Connections' #523.
Study trains Port Jackson sharks to respond to jazz music
Ireland vs. Argentina 2024 livestream: Watch Autumn Internationals for free
MotoGP livestream: Watch the 2024 Barcelona Grand Prix for free
Italy vs. France 2024 livestream: Watch UEFA Nations League for free
Dell S3422DWG Gaming Monitor deal: save $100 at Amazon
Best kitchen deal: A renewed Vitamix Explorian blender is just $199.95 at Amazon
Best roborock deal: Save $400 on Q5 Pro+ Robot Vacuum and Mop
Tennessee vs. Georgia football livestreams: kickoff time, streaming deals, and more
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。