fredk
Sep 2 2016, 06:05 PM
Phil Stooke
Sep 2 2016, 06:08 PM
Beat me to it, fredk! This is the start of a whole new adventure - and a new thread, methinks.
Phil
fredk
Sep 3 2016, 01:53 AM
And according to
Crumpler, we are headed eastwards, ie straight downslope, after threading the gap.
elakdawalla
Sep 3 2016, 06:03 PM
QUOTE (Phil Stooke @ Sep 2 2016, 11:08 AM)
Beat me to it, fredk! This is the start of a whole new adventure - and a new thread, methinks.
Seems right, so I made a new thread. I'll rename it if this valley gets a name!
charborob
Sep 3 2016, 08:02 PM
Sol 4483 Lpancam. Reminds me of Lindbergh mound.
Floyd
Sep 4 2016, 09:28 PM
This is the best map I could find, but ends just where we want to see where we are going. Can anyone link a better wide view map, or one with an elevation grid?
fredk
Sep 4 2016, 10:46 PM
This official route map has contours and extends a ways south and east of Marathon. (We should move this to the new thread.) [MOD: DONE.]
charborob
Sep 5 2016, 01:00 AM
Sol 4484 Lpancam view of Plymouth II and Wharton Ridge:
Floyd
Sep 8 2016, 01:00 AM
Thanks fredk, the official route map is great. However, I don't see any difference in the slope of the two valleys. So does anyone understand why we couldn't go down Marathon valley to the bottom and we can this new valley?
marsophile
Sep 8 2016, 02:32 AM
My take on this is that we could go down Marathon Valley, but then we could not come back up in order to go down this other valley, which is what we want to do for science reasons.
vjkane
Sep 8 2016, 03:54 PM
QUOTE (fredk @ Sep 4 2016, 03:46 PM)
This official route map has contours and extends a ways south and east of Marathon. (We should move this to the new thread.) [MOD: DONE.]
Would it be possible for someone to do a version of this map that shows the gulley that is the goal of this extended mission?
Phil Stooke
Sep 8 2016, 04:07 PM
My impression - without a direct link to the mission team - is that the rover will not go all the way to the bottom until it reaches the gulley area. Where we are now the valleys slope down until they reach areas with too much loose debris on them, making a climb back up very uncertain. So they can go up and down as targets present themselves, to a certain point but not beyond.
Phil
Sean
Sep 8 2016, 04:44 PM
I hope this doesn't qualify as spam...but here is a delicious 3D model of the area;
Marathon Valley @Sketchfab
atomoid
Sep 8 2016, 11:00 PM
QUOTE (vjkane @ Sep 8 2016, 08:54 AM)
Would it be possible for someone to do a version of this map that shows the gulley that is the goal of this extended mission?
The location of the gully doesn't appear to be covered by
that map, but
big THANKS to Sean who has made it easy and indeed delicious fun for us to explore certain areas in high resolution by sharing his Sketchfab projects.
Here's an excerpt from that showing (1) approx sol4488 and (2) that
bright dome and (3) the presumptive gulley, further detailed in Post #314 of the
Marathon Valley thread (IPBoard cross-thread linking doesn't seem to work)
I'd venture a guess Oppy will traverse at various elevations along the ridge distracted by ad-hoc targets as it makes its way south to
(presumed) gully.
Click to view attachment
Phil Stooke
Sep 11 2016, 01:52 PM
Wharton Ridge... do we know where the name comes from? I'm thinking it may commemorate Robert A. Wharton of the Desert Research Institute in Reno, Nevada, who died on 19 September 2012. He conducted research on Antarctic ice-covered lakes with similarities to possible environments on early Mars.
Phil
Phil Stooke
Sep 21 2016, 01:08 PM
Sol 4500 !!! - and another drive, bringing us close to the little hill whose name is still not released yet. Map update this evening.
Images are
HERE , not yet on Midnight Planets.
Phil
charborob
Sep 22 2016, 12:03 PM
Sol 4500 navcam view of Spirit Mound:
charborob
Sep 23 2016, 11:14 AM
Sol 4502 Lnavcam. Moving closer to Spirit Mound:
charborob
Sep 25 2016, 01:32 PM
Sols 4502-4504 Lpancam view of Spirit Mound:
JohnVV
Sep 27 2016, 06:36 PM
QUOTE
Would it be possible for someone to do a version of this map that shows the gulley that is the goal of this extended mission?
i am working on a dem using ASP b,but the hirisd data files are huge 6 gig each
even a cropped area of the current location is 1.5 gig
this will take some time
atomoid
Sep 27 2016, 08:10 PM
sol4505 windtails in lower right suggest consistent upslope winds here, wondering if that is generally true on both sides of the rim, as i was under the impression that the wind pattern over the crater is west>east on a high level which id assumed would also tend to effect that at ground level as well, but i guess not being a meteorologist i was surprised by this, so am just guessing its still on the mains a general west>east flow but the air is instead getting pulled up the rim under a vortex effect imparted by the intervening crater rim to that flow, or perhaps its just rising up due to ground heating and following the contours up the rim..?
on another note that
spire just behind the boulder on sol4506 turns out to be part of the ridge, not a background feature (parellel view)
Click to view attachment
Phil Stooke
Sep 28 2016, 12:38 AM
Given the complexity of the topography here, it's not really possible to guess a local prevailing wind direction from a regional upper-level wind direction. In the floor of Endeavour below us, the large field of light-toned drifts suggest north-south winds, approximately.
Phil
JohnVV
Sep 28 2016, 05:34 AM
atomoid
Oct 3 2016, 09:20 PM
a couple rotated MI anaglyphs of... (Council Bluffs? Gasconade?
Phil's map) from
sol4512Click to view attachment Click to view attachment
Phil Stooke
Oct 3 2016, 09:31 PM
It's Gasconade.
Phil
Sean
Oct 4 2016, 07:16 AM
Here is an update on the Oppy arena...
Beyond Lewis & Clark Gap @ Sketchfab
fredk
Oct 5 2016, 04:00 PM
A sketch of future plans from the latest
PS update:QUOTE
Once her work at Gasconade is done, Opportunity will rove on, driving southwest through the rim and then angling to motor up a Cape Tribulation slope to targets at the top of the hill.
QUOTE
The longer-term objective is to head south across the plains or along the apron on the western side Endeavour’s west rim and over to Cape Byron where there’s a gully believed to have been carved by water or a liquid debris flow.
QUOTE
"...we will exit the gully much farther into the crater than we are now at Spirit Mound,” said Arvidson. “There are a set of benches we'll drive across and one of them could be an outcrop of Matijevic Formation."
atomoid
Oct 5 2016, 08:22 PM
Still trying to get a handle on where exactly we are going... perhaps the area rectangled (with adjacent processed inset) in the google earth extract below may be the assumed gulley that fredk pointed out early on, if it's enough on the Byron side, and it does seem to be the only feature that fits the description to my untrained eye, if that all pans out the arrows may identify the bench of the presumed Matijevic Formation.
Click to view attachment
Phil Stooke
Oct 5 2016, 09:09 PM
Yes, I think that is the gully.
Phil
Jaro_in_Montreal
Oct 7 2016, 09:26 PM
Interesting.
How come Oppy gets to go near potential sources of moisture, but Curiosity must be rerouted to avoid them?
fredk
Oct 7 2016, 09:52 PM
The features near MSL bear some resemblence to recurring slope lineae (RSL), dark streaks that appear and reappear and that might be related to current water.
If the gully near Oppy was carved by water, it was probably in the very distant past - I haven't heard anyone suggest water was still present. The Oppy gully isn't an RSL.
atomoid
Oct 7 2016, 11:00 PM
It's almost as if the gulley near Oppy had to have been exhumed, it just looks too surficial to be that ancient, perhaps what we see is just a lingering remnant of its once lower reaches, though I have no idea if we know how deep these slopes have been eroded over the eons.
Phil Stooke
Oct 7 2016, 11:04 PM
Check this out... MEPAG presentation from yesterday's meeting, with Opportunity's future route mapped out.
Phil
http://mepag.jpl.nasa.gov/meeting/2016-10/...MarsScience.pdf
James Sorenson
Oct 9 2016, 11:29 PM
Habukaz
Oct 10 2016, 05:46 PM
QUOTE (Phil Stooke @ Oct 8 2016, 01:04 AM)
Check this out... MEPAG presentation from yesterday's meeting, with Opportunity's future route mapped out.
Phil
http://mepag.jpl.nasa.gov/meeting/2016-10/...MarsScience.pdfExcellent, just what
the official release was missing.
I like that they are planning to visit a small well-preserved crater; makes me all nostalgic.
marsbug
Oct 11 2016, 01:47 PM
QUOTE (atomoid @ Oct 8 2016, 12:00 AM)
It's almost as if the gulley near Oppy had to have been exhumed, it just looks too surficial to be that ancient, perhaps what we see is just a lingering remnant of its once lower reaches, though I have no idea if we know how deep these slopes have been eroded over the eons.
TBH my bet would be that it's more recent, and due to dust or debris flow with little or no water involved - perhaps a little lubrication to help things move if it dates from a high obliquity period, but my gut feeling is that the idea of liquid water being involved is more wh\t people are determined toi find than what is actually there.
Would be delighted to be wrong though!
atomoid
Oct 13 2016, 11:42 PM
James Sorenson
Oct 14 2016, 01:09 AM
From the tracking site.
pancam_EDM_test_L6R2
http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/opportuni...A4P2671L6M1.JPGLooks like the MER team is getting ready to attempt to image Schiaparelli's descent.
Good luck on the Imaging attempt, and good luck to the Schiaparelli team!
Explorer1
Oct 14 2016, 07:03 AM
Since Oppy is on the inner west rim of the crater though, the best view would be if the trajectory overshot the centre of the landing ellipse and ended up far to the east; if the targeting is perfect than ironically the slope will block the view (see
http://www.leonarddavid.com/europe-readies...ber-touchdown/) . And obviously the MER team has its own mission which doesn't involve doubling back to the other side of the valley for the sake of one 1 pixel. Don't expect anything like the cover of the Martian Chronicles..
PaulM
Oct 18 2016, 11:27 AM
Am I right in thinking that the landing ellipse for Insight at Meridiani Planum is roughly the same as that for Schiaparelli? Oppy may therefore be able to take a photo of Insight landing in 2 Year's time.
Phil Stooke
Oct 18 2016, 11:51 AM
No, not at all. Insight is heading for an area north of Gale crater, half a world away from Meridiani Planum, and too far north for Curiosity to see it.
Phil
fredk
Oct 19 2016, 09:59 PM
Here's the difference of each 4528 pancam frame from their mean, then stretched and smoothed:
Click to view attachmentI see no sign of Schiaparelli, just a few cosmic ray hits. (This is daytime at Meridiani so the exposures must be very short and so I wouldn't expect the lander/chute to be streaked.)
James Sorenson
Oct 27 2016, 09:01 AM
The 1x3 SW Ridge mosaic from 4535.
James Sorenson
Oct 28 2016, 07:17 AM
I have been assembling the Spirit Mound mosaic that it has been taking. Here is a preview GIF of it.
Phil Stooke
Oct 30 2016, 02:29 AM
James Sorenson
Oct 31 2016, 06:25 PM
The scene to the South on Sol-4534.
False color:
James Sorenson
Nov 5 2016, 09:13 PM
The view to the Northwest from Spirit Mound, Sol-4542.
False Color:
charborob
Nov 6 2016, 03:25 PM
James, where did you find these images? There is nothing on Midnight Planets for sol 4542, and the MER raw image page doesn't have them either.
fredk
Nov 6 2016, 04:33 PM
They're available at the merpublic site:
http://merpublic.s3.amazonaws.com/oss/merb...es_sol4542.jsonThere are other images missing from the jpl and exploratorium sites - they missed 4536 and 4537 eg but those images are at the merpublic site.
This site was discussed
in this post.
Floyd
Nov 17 2016, 11:08 PM
Opportunity is doing great explorations and there are lots of images on the Exploratorium site. Thanks James for recent image mosaics. Opportunity should get at lest some of the love mostly going to Curiosity.
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