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The Register - Offbeat: Geek's Guide

Away from Oktoberfest, Munich's museums serve science on tap Getting up close with the Concorde, Concordski, and Buran Geek's Guide to Britain: Newport Transporter Vaccine dreams: A trip to Oxford to see a biscuit tin, some bed pans and ChAdOx1 nCov-19 Western Approaches Museum: WRENs, wargames, and victory in the Atlantic The Eigiau Dam Disaster: Deluges and deceit at the dawn of hydroelectric power The Wight stuff: Marconi and the island, when working remotely on wireless comms meant something very different Rewriting the checklists: 50 years since Apollo 13 reported it 'had a problem' – and boffins saved the day Come kneel with us at UK's Cathedral, er, Oil Rig of the Canal: Engineering masterpiece Anderton Boat Lift German scientists, Black Knights and the birthplace of British rocketry Talking a Blue Streak: The ambitious, quiet waste of the Spadeadam Rocket Establishment Orford Ness: Military secrets and unique wildlife on the remote Suffolk coast The Central Telegraph Office was serving spam 67 years before vikings sang about it on telly What made a super high-tech home in Victorian England? Hydroelectric witchery, for starters Blueprint of modern construction can be found in a tech cluster... of 19th century England Mirror mirror on sea wall, spot those airships, make Kaiser bawl Take-off crash 'n' burn didn't kill the Concorde, it was just too bloody expensive to maintain Fancy a viaduct? We have a wrought Victorian iron marvel to sell you Life's a beach – then you're the comms nexus of the British Empire and Marconi-baiting hax0rs Worcestershire's airborne electronics warfare wonderland Hotter than the Sun: JET – Earth’s biggest fusion reactor, in Culham Fancy that! Craft which float over everything on a cushion of air Everything you never knew about mail: The Postal Museum opens Reg reader turns Geek's Guides to Britain into Geek's Map of Britain Extreme trainspotting on Britain's highest (and windiest) railway Lochs, rifle stocks and two EPIC sea gates: Thomas Telford's Highland waterway Going underground: The Royal Mail's great London train squeeze Turing, Hauser, Sinclair – haunt computing's Cambridge A-team stamping ground Avoiding Liverpool was the aim: All aboard the world's ONLY moving aqueduct Inside Electric Mountain: Britain's biggest rechargeable battery The field at the centre of the universe: Cambridge's outdoor pulsar pusher Come on kids, let's go play in the abandoned nuclear power station Bletchley Park remembers 'forgotten genius' Gordon Welchman Bookworms' Weston mecca: The Oxford institution with a Swindon secret Rock reboot and the Welsh windy wonder: Centre for Alternative Technology Get thee behind me, Satanic mills! Robert Owen's Scottish legacy The Great Barrier Relief – Inside London's heavy metal and concrete defence act Planet killer: Ex-army officer's Welsh space-rock mission Taming the Thames – The place that plugged London's Great Stink Bridge, ship 'n' tunnel – the Brunels' hidden Thames trip Saturn's rings, radio waves ... poetry? At home with Scotland's Mr Physics Marconi: The West of England's very own Italian wireless pioneer Suffering satellites! Goonhilly's ARTHUR REBORN for SPAAAACE Kingston's aviation empire: From industry firsts to Airfix heroes Measure for measure: We visit the most applied-physicist-rich building in the UK IBM Hursley Park: Where Big Blue buries the past, polishes family jewels Mosquitoes, Comets and Vampires: The de Havilland Museum How the UK's national memory lives in a ROBOT in Kew TAT-1: Call the cable guy, all I see is a beautiful beach
Are you aware of the gravity of the situation on Mars? Why yes, say boffins: We rejigged Curiosity to measure it
2019-02-01 · via The Register - Offbeat: Geek's Guide

Geek's Guide

Shock after accelerometers hacked, in the old-school sense, and rock density probed

Brainiacs have today revealed how they rejigged instruments aboard NASA’s Martian rover Curiosity to measure changes in the Red Planet's gravity over its surface.

"Curiosity, essentially, has a new science instrument, six and a half years into its mission," said Kevin Lewis, lead author of a published paper describing the work, and an assistant professor at Johns Hopkins University. "This allows us to get new information about the subsurface of Mars in ways the rover was never designed to do."

A team of researchers from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, John Hopkins University, Carnegie Institution, University of Maryland, and Arizona State University, all in the USA, were responsible for calibrating the Curiosity’s accelerometers for gravimetry. The nuclear-powered rover has highly sensitive accelerometers, and the aforementioned boffins were able to repurpose these to measure gravity on Mars.

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As the rover climbed Mount Sharp, a five-kilometre-high formation (that's roughly three miles high) in the center of the Gale Crater, the team measured the difference in gravity it experienced along the way.

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This allowed the researchers to measure the density of the rock underneath Curiosity's wheels. To their surprise, the rock was less dense than expected, according to the rejigged sensors.

Data taken earlier from Curiosity's CheMin instrument, which analyzes the mineralogy of the rock samples, pegged the density of the sedimentary rock at a higher density than was measured by the gravity readings. This suggested the sedimentary rock was highly porous.

This provides hints as to how Mount Sharp formed in the Gale Crater. Some scientists believed that it was once filled with sedimentary rock that slowly eroded away over time. However, being so porous, it now looks like it grew by accumulation of material over time.

"This study represents the first gravity traverse and measurement of rock density on Mars. The low density of rocks in Gale Crater suggests that they did not undergo deep burial," said Nicholas Schmerr, coauthor of the paper and an assistant professor at the University of Maryland, on Thursday.

"This could mean that Mount Sharp was not excavated by erosion, but rather was constructed by wind deposition and other processes. Either way, it seems that Mars has had the capability to lay down significant amounts of low-density sedimentary rocks that record a complex environmental history." ®