Connect with us

Published

on

NASA’s Curiosity rover has recently begun a new chapter in its journey on Mars after entering the “Uyuni” quadrangle, a 1.5 km by 1.5 km map grid with a name after the Bolivian town near the world’s largest salt flats. The transition follows after the rover carried out an approximately 48-metre drive from the Altadena drill site. With new geology to explore and an expanded set of experiments, Curiosity’s journey through this region has the potential to return fresh observations into Mars’ ancient environmental conditions.

Curiosity Explores Mars’ Uyuni Quad, Begins New Study of Rock Layers, Craters, and Ancient Climates

As per a mission update from Lauren Edgar, planetary geologist at the USGS Astrogeology Science Centre, the transition to the Uyuni quad is significant. Each Mars quadrangle is named after an Earth location with under 100,000 people and draws on regional geology for target naming. Uyuni and nearby Atacama sites—known for Mars analogue research and extreme environments—will now lend their names to the features explored in this phase. The current sol plan involves a blend of contact science, visual imaging, and movement, all tailored to understand the bedrock composition and surface processes in this drier region of Mount Sharp.

The rover’s robotic arm will deploy its APXS and MAHLI tools to study a nodular bedrock target dubbed “Flamingo”. Remote sensing includes Mastcam mosaics of “Los Patos”, a possible impact crater, and “La Lava”, a dark rock. These images will document sediment transport features and inform ChemCam’s upcoming LIBS firing at a bedrock spot named “Tacos”. A long-distance RMI mosaic of “Mishe Mokwa” butte will further analyse sediment layers.

Following the science block, Curiosity will travel approximately 56 metres southwest and collect post-drive imagery to inform the next sol plan. The next day will be dedicated to calibration and environmental monitoring activities via Mastcam and Navcam, particularly focused on dust and cloud movement in the Martian atmosphere.

Researchers are eager to study what these formations can reveal of past Martian climates as the team works toward larger boxwork exposures. The Uyuni quad will bring together distant worlds through a common geological story using names and formations based on our own geologic brethren on Earth.

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who’sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.


Realme 15 Series Launch Timeline Leaked; Lite Variant Surfaces Online



Honor Magic V5 Set to Launch on July 2, Design Officially Teased

Related Stories

Continue Reading

Science

Fermi Telescope Detects Gamma-Ray Halo That Could Be First Direct Dark Matter Signal

Published

on

By

NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope has detected a faint halo of high-energy gamma rays around the Milky Way’s centre—matching predictions for dark-matter annihilation. The finding, reported by Professor Tomonori Totani, could represent the first direct glimpse of dark matter, but scientists caution that alternative explanations remain and independent confirm…

Continue Reading

Science

Researchers Develop New Materials for Truly Stretchable OLED Screens

Published

on

By

Researchers at the University of Chicago have created new materials that make OLED displays fully stretchable. Their key advance is an aluminium electrode embedded in a gallium–indium alloy, allowing it to “crackle” and self-heal under strain as liquid metal fills emerging gaps. Alongside this, a newly designed stretchy conductive polymer maintains electrical pe…

Continue Reading

Science

Scientists Finally Identify What Drives Venus’s Fast Winds

Published

on

By

A new study has identified the primary force behind Venus’s extreme superrotating atmosphere: a once-per-day thermal tide driven by solar heating. Using data from Venus Express and Akatsuki along with circulation models, researchers show that this daily tide transports most of the momentum that accelerates cloud-top winds to speeds over 100 metres per second. The re…

Continue Reading

Trending