NASA pimps Mars 2020 Rover with rock zapping laser.
The SuperCam will help analyze Martian rocks and soil in the search for past life.
Not only did the Mars 2020 Rover recently score
a set of wheels and legs, it now sports a super instrument the geniuses
at NASA will use to search for evidence of past life on Mars. Engineers
at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, fitted the
new rover, which is also yet to receive its official name, with the SuperCam Mast Unit early last week,
What
does the SuperCam do? It's the next-generation version of the ChemCam
instrument installed on NASA's Curiosity Mars rover, which is currently
going about making its own discoveries
on the Red Planet. According to NASA, the instrument's camera, laser
and spectrometers "can identify the chemical and mineral makeup of
targets as small as a pencil point from a distance of more than 20 feet
(6 meters)."
NASA intends to put the SuperCam to good use
examining Martian rocks and soil, in particular to seek out organic
compounds that could be related to past life on Mars.A joint effort between the US, France and Spain, the instrument has come a long way since inception.
"SuperCam has come a long way from being a bold and ambitious idea to an actual instrument," said Sylvestre Maurice, the SuperCam deputy principal investigator at the Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie in Toulouse, France. "While it still has a long way to go - all the way to Mars - this is a great day for not only SuperCam but the amazing consortium that put it together."
NASA plans to launch the Mars 2020 Rover in, you guessed it, 2020. Its intended landing point, after a year of space travel, is at the Red Planet's Jezero Crater.
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