PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Mars Pathfinder Mission Status
July 8, 1997
3 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time
The first in-situ chemical measurements ever obtained of a
rock on Mars - nicknamed Barnacle Bill for its rough, barnacle-
like surface - surprised scientists and raised questions about
the duration of volcanic activity occurring on Mars in its early
formation.
Dr. Rudolph Rieder, of the Max Planck Institute for
Chemistry, Germany, and principal investigator on the Alpha
Proton X-Ray Spectrometer (APXS) team, reported that Barnacle
Bill, an 8-to-10-inch tall rock near the Mars Pathfinder lander,
was unusually rich in silicon, which is more characteristic of
Earth rocks than Martian rocks. On Earth, volcanic rocks contain
significant amounts of free silica in the form of quartz. The
rich silicon content puts Barnacle Bill in one of the most common
categories of volcanic rocks on Earth, known as "andesites."
"It turns out this rock has some rather peculiar chemical
characteristics, which make it very unlike the other SNC
meteorites," said Dr. Hap McSween, University of Tennessee, who
is a participating scientist on the APXS team. (The SNC
meteorites are those found on Earth that are believed to be of
Martian origin.)
"In particular, it has a very high content of silicon or
silicon dioxide (quartz)," McSween said. "It appears that
Barnacle Bill falls into a category called 'andesites,' which are
among the most common volcanic rocks on Earth."
Andesites are mixtures of very fine crystalline and other
minerals that are formed through a process known as
differentiation. Differentiation is the process by which crustal
materials deep within a planet's interior are repeatedly melted
and remelted, thereby shaping and reshaping the surface of the
planet. Mars today has very few volcanoes and no continental
plates like those found on Earth to suggest it was internally
active for very long. Barnacle Bill's chemical signature may
throw that theory into question.
Today's weather report was similar to yesterday's: at 3 p.m.
local Mars time, it was about 5 degrees Fahrenheit, pressure was
about 6.74 millibars, with very light winds out of the northwest.
"The weather on Mars is pretty boring," said Dr. Jeffrey
Barnes, Oregon State University, who is a member of the
atmospheric/meteorological experiment. "Northern summer in the
subtropics on Mars is pretty much the same from day to day.
Fifty or 60 days from now, we'll start to see dramatic changes
with fall."
Atmospheric opacity - or how clear the sky is according to
Pathfinder's atmospheric experiment - showed that Mars is
moderately dusty up to about 40 kilometers (25 miles) above the
surface. The dust appears to be uniformly distributed, and is
expected to increase as Mars approaches its dusty season in the fall,
Barnes said. The visibility on Mars was estimated to be about 32
kilometers (20 miles) or more, roughly equivalent to a moderately
smoggy day in Los Angeles.
The rover's next task later today will be to perform a
chemical analysis of the soil around a large rock named "Yogi."
Once the soil measurements are taken, Sojourner will then back up
to the left side of the rock and begin a chemical analysis using
the APXS instrument.
On the fifth day of surface operations since Pathfinder's
historic July 4 landing, all spacecraft and rover systems
continue to operate extremely well. Pathfinder is returning data
at an unprecedented rate of more than 8,500 bits per second and
has returned 1,575 images of the Martian surface to date. A 360-
degree, color panorama of the Ares Vallis landing site is
expected to be released within the next few days.
#####