MSL Media Teleconference
08.17.12
Participants
John Grotzinger - Curiosity project scientist, California Institute of Technology
Roger Wiens - ChemCam principal investigator, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Grotzinger:
Subbing for Mission Manager Mike Watkins. All instruments continue to checkout. DAN nstrument did bunch of quick pulses for 15 minutes, RAD "was listening", verified DAN was working. Weather instrument REMS collecting data, getting first data from full diurnal cycle on Mars. Yesterday's high was 1 degree above freezing. Thirty years since last long-duration monitoring of weather on Mars, since Viking 1 stopped communicating.
First image: Rover with crater rim in background.
Second image: Glenelg may be our first moderate-duration drive target. [It's where three different kinds of terrain meet, just what someone was talking about as a first target early on.] Then to base of Mount Sharp, then main target area on slopes.
Third image: Do local science first, go over to Glenelg where three kinds of terrain meet. Palindrome, going to pass through there coming and going.
Fourth image: Scour marks from descent stage thrusters. Again names of very old Canadian geologic formations, tried to tie in with heat.
Fifth image: Goulburn Scour one of greatest interest, will aim ChemCam here and get higher-resolution images.
Once done, drive toward Glenelg, expect to be first target of drilling. Will take soil sample enroute.
Sixth image: This one underscores the reason we picked this landing site, seven kilometers away. Looks like Sedona or Four Corners area, mesas made of layers of light-colored reddish outcrops. Expecting to find hydrated minerals.
Everything I need to know I learned through Googling.