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It's all still Rock and Roll to Us: Sols 3889-3891
This image was taken by Right Navigation Camera onboard NASA's Mars rover Curiosity on Sol 3887 (July 14th, 2023). Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech.
It's all still Rock and Roll to Us: Sols 3889-3891
by Abigail Fraeman, Planetary Geologist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 18, 2023

Earth Planning Date: Friday, July 14, 2023: In human spaceflight, it's a tradition to wake the crew up with a "wake-up song" to let them know "Wake up, it's time to get to work!" For decades, this tradition has also been adopted by the Mars rover teams, with the tactical team at JPL choosing wake-up songs to play in the downlink room at the start of the planning day for us Earth-based "crew members."

These songs are most helpful right after landing, when the team is living on "Mars time" and operating the rovers on Mars' 25-hour daily schedule. Scheduling shifts on a 25-hour timeline means we start work about an hour later every day, and this leads to some serious interplanetary jet lag! However, once rovers have been operating for a while and the team settles into a rhythm, most of the team members' schedules shift back to Earth-time, and we start planning two or even three sols (Martian days) at a time when Mars' and Earth's time zones don't quite match.

The switch back to Earth time, and the fact that we've been operating for thousands of sols at this point, means we don't play wake-up songs every tactical shift anymore, although we haven't let the tradition slip entirely!

We did have a wake-up song today, and it was chosen by tactical downlink lead P.J. Rollins. His song choice? "It's Still Rock and Roll to Me" by Billy Joel. P.J. explained, "Touch and Go = Rock and Roll... Get it?"

Hahahahaha. Perfect. No notes.

We did indeed do a touch and go in Wednesday's plan, and at downlink we learned that both the touch (contact science on target "Sounion") and go (a ~15 m drive) completed as planned. Hooray!

In today's plan, we're going to do some more contact science on the rocks in our workspace, along with a ~27 m drive to the west. Before our drive, we'll collect MAHLI and APXS data from some dark, platy materials on a target named "Thermopylae," and do a DRT with MAHLI and APXS on a target named "Zachlorou." We'll also observe a small dark float rock in the workspace named "Megara" with Mastcam multispectral and ChemCam, and another portion of the bedrock in front of us with ChemCam on a target named "Salamina." SAM will collect data this weekend too, measuring the Martian atmosphere as part of a campaign to systematically monitor seasonal changes in its composition.

Additional Mastcam and Navcam images for both geology and environmental science are also included in the plan, along with REMS, RAD, and DAN measurements. Other observations include a long distance image of Peace Vallis on the crater rim using ChemCam's RMI and a post-drive ChemCam AEGIS activity.

Related Links
Curiosity Mars Science Laboratory
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
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Sols 3887-3888: The Vastness
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 14, 2023
Earth Planning Date: Wednesday, July 12, 2023 - A blue hue inches over the horizon illuminating a sea of rocks scattered across the landscape like the scales of a fish. Among the sea, alone in the vastness, a rover sleeps. The time is now 9:25, in a "time zone" defined for itself. The waking rover receives instructions from a tiny speck of light, far away and slowly creeping towards the other side of the sun. They read as follows (translated to English from interplanetary robot): Tosol is sol 3887 ... read more

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