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Collection and In Situ Analyses of Regolith Samples by the Mars 2020 Rover: Implications for Their Formation and Alteration History

Beteiligte Autor*innen der JOANNEUM RESEARCH:
Autor*innen:
Hausrath, E. M. and Sullivan, R. and Goreva, Y. and Zorzano, M. P. and Vaughan, A. and Cousin, A. and Siljestroem, S. and Sharma, S. and Shumway, A. O. and Kizovski, T. and VanBommel, S. J. and Tice, M. and Knight, A. and Martinez, G. and Vicente‐Retortillo, A. and Mandon, L. and Adcock, C. T. and Madariaga, J. M. and Población, I. and Johnson, J. R. and Lasue, J. and Gasnault, O. and Randazzo, N. and Cardarelli, E. L. and Kronyak, R. and Bechtold, A. and Paar, G. and Udry, A. and Forni, O. and Bedford, C. C. and Carman, N. A. and Bell, J. F. and Benison, K. and Bosak, T. and Brown, A. and Broz, A. and Calef, F. and Clark, B. C. and Cloutis, E. and Czaja, A. D. and Fornaro, T. and Fouchet, T. and Golombek, M. and Gómez, F. and Herd, C. D. K. and Herkenhoff, K. and Jakubek, R. S. and Jandura, L. and Martinez‐Frias, J. and Mayhew, L. E. and Meslin, P.‐Y. and Newman, C. E. and Núñez, J. I. and Poulet, F. and Royer, C. and Russell, P. and Sephton, M. A. and Sharma, S. K. and Shuster, D. and Simon, J. I. and Tirona, I. and Wiens, R. C. and Weiss, B. P. and Williams, A. J. and Williford, K. and Wolf, Z. U.
Abstract:
The Perseverance rover has sampled mmsize lithic fragments containing olivine likely from at least two source regions from the surface of an inactive megaripple surface, and finegrained material from the surface and to a depth of ∼4–6 cm. Some of the mmsize grains lack a coherent diffraction pattern measured by PIXL, consistent with the presence of poorly ordered secondary phases that have been altered. Analysis of these materials on Earth will allow examination of materials that have experienced aqueous, potentially habitable environments that could contain biosignatures. Fluorescence of three different patterns was detected, consistent with inorganic emissions from silica defects or rare earth elements in certain mineral phases, although organic origin cannot be excluded. Analysis of Autofocus Context Imager and Wide Angle Topographic Sensor for Operations and eNgineering images of the subsurface material and MEDA thermal inertia measurements indicate average grain sizes of ∼125 and ∼150 μm, respectively, for the bulk material within the megaripple. The finegrained material in the sampling location indicates chemical compositions similar to previously proposed global components as well as airfall dust. In situ and associated atmospheric measurements provide evidence of recent processes likely including water vapor in soil crust formation. The sampled material will therefore help elucidate the formation of Martian soils; current surfaceatmosphere interactions; the composition, shape, and size distribution of dust grains valuable for studies of past and present Martian climate and for assessing potential health and other risks to human missions; and ancient, aqueously altered environments that could have been habitable, and, if Mars contained life, possibly contain biosignatures.
Titel:
Collection and In Situ Analyses of Regolith Samples by the Mars 2020 Rover: Implications for Their Formation and Alteration History
Herausgeber (Verlag):
American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Publikationsreihe

Name
Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets
Herausgeber(Verlag)
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Nummer
130
ISSN
21699100

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