The Mars Rover Opportunity has reached the rim of Victoria Crater and has beamed back a stunning picture of the place. The little robot that could has done good.
The rover beamed black-and-white images back to Earth showing the crater interior complete with hanging rocky cliffs and rippling sand dunes on its floor.
"We made it!" said rover principal scientist Steve Squyres of Cornell University.
The road to Victoria Crater, a half-mile wide and 230-foot deep impact crater, was tough. The six-wheeled Opportunity drove through what scientists called a "wasteland." At one point, it spent five weeks stuck hub-deep in a slippery sand dune before freeing itself.
Victoria, with its exposed walls of thickly layered rocks, is a treasure trove for scientists trying to determine whether the rocks were formed in shallow lakes, which might suggest the planet once could have been hospitable to life.
"The big payoff is getting to the rock record," said deputy principal investigator Ray Arvidson of Washington University in St. Louis.
Opportunity will spend a day looking for a more favorable spot around the rim to take a panorama of the vista. Meanwhile, scientists are plotting Opportunity's next move and analyzing the images to find the safest route for the rover to enter.
You really have to see this picture, click the image to see the full size version. (JPL Website for more Mars stuff is here.)





I just happened to be on the Mars Rover website earlier. I want these people making my next car!!
Spirit
Number of days in operation (in “Sols”): 973
Number of days BEYOND warranty: 883
Opportunity
Number of days in operation (in “Sols”): 952
Number of days BEYOND warranty: 862
The people who designed them expected them to break and/or run out of juice IN 90 DAYS. They have been going for more than 10 times that amount.
Makes me proud to be an engineer…
They have a lot to be proud of. We’re getting a lot more than what we paid for!