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Fri, 06 Apr 2007 |
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Caves on Mars A Mars-orbiting satellite recently spotted seven
dark spots near the planet's equator that
scientists think could be entrances to
underground caves.
The football-field sized holes were observed by
Mars Odyssey's Thermal Emission Imaging System
(THEMIS) and have been dubbed the "seven
sisters" — Dena, Chloe, Wendy, Annie, Abbey,
Nikki and Jeanne — after loved ones of the
researchers who found them.
The potential caves were spotted near a massive
Martian volcano, Arisa Mons. Their openings range
from about 330 to 820 feet (100 to 250 meters)
wide, and one of them, Dena, is thought to extend
nearly 430 feet (130 meters) beneath the planet's
surface.
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The researchers hope the discovery will lead to
more focused spelunking on Mars.
"Caves on Mars could become habitats for future
explorers or could be the only structures that
preserve evidence of past or present microbial
life," said Glenn Cushing of Northern Arizona
University, who first spotted the black areas in
the photographs.
A project here on Earth aims to refine the visual
and infrared techniques THEMIS used to find the
Martian caves and to also develop robots that can
one day enter the caverns and explore them.
Practicing on Earth
Called the Earth-Mars Cave Detection Program, the
project is preparing to enter phase 2, during
which scientists will test their approach
in "Mars analogue" sites, terrestrial
environments with similarities to Martian
landscapes.
These sites will include dry, blistering deserts,
such as the Mojave Desert in California and the
Atacama Desert in Chile, as well as frigid
environments like those of Iceland and Antarctica.
During the first phase of the project, the
researchers acquired the thermal signatures of a
dozen caves in Arizona and New Mexico using an
experimental infrared detector flown aboard an
airplane, called the Quantum Well Infrared
Photodetector (QWIP), as well as data collected
on the ground using a handheld thermal camera.
Cave detection using QWIP works by spotting
regions in the landscape where temperatures are
different from the surroundings.
Inside a cave, temperatures are nearly constant
due to lack of sunlight. Outside, temperatures
fluctuate with the rising and setting of the Sun.
At a cave entrance, these two temperature regimes
mix together to create a unique thermal signature
that, depending on the time of day, can be either
warmer or cooler than the surrounding environment.
"The caves show up as hotspots in a sea of cold,
or as cold spots in a sea of warmth," said study
team member Murzy Jhabvala, chief engineer of the
Instrument Systems and Technology Center at
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.
The data, still being analyzed, look promising.
In one series of images, the researchers snapped
thermal images of Xenolith Cave in New Mexico
over a 24-hour period. The cave opening can be
seen clearly in some of the images.
"It jumps out at you," said Jut Wynne, a
biospeleologist (cave biologist) with the U.S.
Geological Survey and Northern Arizona
University. "It lights up like a Christmas tree
in the predawn and in the late-night shots. It's
a bit more ephemeral during the day shots."
In Phase 2, the researchers will tweak their
technique to figure out the best wavelengths to
use and optimal times during the day for cave
hunting.
"In so doing, we're going to take these
applications and then apply them to an orbiter
platform for Mars," said Wynne, who is also the
Earth-Mars Cave Detection Program project leader.
Robotic cave explorers
The project team also aims to design robots that
can explore caves on Mars after they have been
spotted.
Natalie Cabrol, a planetary geologist with NASA
Ames and the SETI Institute, will be integral to
this part of the project.
Cabrol is a Mars robot veteran. Before Spirit and
Opportunity were sent to Mars, she helped
engineers perfect their designs by field-testing
the robotic rovers in the Atacama Desert in Chile.
The researchers may have to design more than one
type of robotic cave explorer.
"There are many types of caves," Cabrol said in a
telephone interview. "It may be that we come up
with one very versatile design ... or we might
end up with several designs."
If the caves have a relatively simple structure —
like lava tubes, which are caves carved by
flowing magma and are relatively simple and
straight — a rover-type robot might work, Cabrol
said.
"I would doubt that a rover, equipped as they are
now, would do a good job in a cave" with a more
complicated geometry, she said.
Open to ideas
The researchers are also considering other
robotic design possibilities, including the
deployment of several miniature robots together
into a cave.
"You could throw out an array of microbots in a
birdshot approach over an area where you think
there is a cave," Wynne told SPACE.com.
The microbots could then use sonar or some other
method to confirm the presence of a cave and
pinpoint its location.
Whatever form the team's robotic explorer
ultimately takes, it will have to be agile, have
some basic sense of self-awareness, sport
excellent night vision and have the ability to
communicate with one other in some innovative
way, since conventional radio communication might
not work well in caves, Cabrol said.
"We are very much on the starting line on this,"
she added. "This is very exciting. This is really
the time when ideas are flitting all over the
place."
Posted 19:22
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