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Guy Webster (818) 354-6278
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

News Release: 2006-152                                                  
December 28, 2006      

NASA Mars Team Teaches Old Rovers New Tricks to Kick Off Year Four
 
NASA's twin Mars rovers, nearing the third anniversary of their landings, are 
getting smarter as they 
get older. 
 
The unexpected longevity of Spirit and Opportunity is giving the space agency a 
chance to field-test 
on Mars some new capabilities useful both to these missions and future rovers. 
Spirit will begin its 
fourth year on Mars on Jan. 3 (PST); Opportunity on Jan. 24.  In addition to 
their continuing 
scientific observations, they are now testing four new skills included in 
revised flight software 
uploaded to their onboard computers. 

One of the new capabilities enables spacecraft to examine images and recognize 
certain types of 
features. It is based on software developed for NASA's Space Technology 6 
"thinking spacecraft." 

Spirit has photographed dozens of dusty whirlwinds in action, and both rovers 
have photographed 
clouds. Until now, however, scientists on Earth have had to sift through many 
transmitted images 
from Mars to find those few. With the new intelligence boost, the rovers can 
recognize dust devils or 
clouds and select only the relevant parts of those images to send back to 
Earth. This increased 
efficiency will free up more communication time for additional scientific 
investigations. 

To recognize dust devils, the new software looks for changes from one image to 
the next, taken a few 
seconds apart, of the same field of view.  To find clouds, it looks for 
non-uniform features in the 
portion of an image it recognizes as the sky.  

Another new feature, called "visual target tracking," enables a rover to keep 
recognizing a designated 
landscape feature as the rover moves. Khaled Ali of NASA's Jet Propulsion 
Laboratory, Pasadena, 
Calif., flight software team leader for Spirit and Opportunity, said, "The 
rover keeps updating its 
template of what the feature looks like. It may be a rock that looks bigger as 
the rover approaches it, 
or maybe the shape looks different from a different angle, but the rover still 
knows it's the same 
rock."  

Visual target tracking can be combined with a third new feature -- autonomy in 
calculating where it is 
safe to reach out with the contact tools on the rover's robotic arm. The 
combination gives Spirit and 
Opportunity a capability called "go and touch," which is yet to be tested on 
Mars. So far in the 
mission, whenever a rover has driven to a new location, the crew on Earth has 
had to evaluate images 
of the new location to decide where the rover could place its contact 
instruments on a subsequent day.  
After the new software has been tested and validated, the crew will have the 
option of letting a rover 
choose an arm target for itself the same day it drives to a new location.

The new software also improves the autonomy of each rover for navigating away 
from hazards by 
building better maps of their surroundings than they have done previously. This 
new capability was 
developed by Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, and JPL.  

"Before this, the rovers could only think one step ahead about getting around 
an obstacle," said JPL's 
Dr. John Callas, project manager for the Mars Exploration Rovers. "If they 
encountered an obstacle 
or hazard, they'd back off one step and try a different direction, and if that 
direction didn't work 
they'd try another, then another. And sometimes the rover could not find a 
solution. With this new 
capability, the rover will be smarter about navigating in complex terrain, 
thinking several steps ahead. 
It could back out of a dead-end cul-de-sac. It could even find its way through 
a maze."

This is the most comprehensive of four revisions to the rovers' flight software 
since launch. One new 
version was uplinked during the cruise to Mars, and the rovers have switched to 
upgraded versions 
twice since their January 2004 landings. 

Callas said, "These rovers are a great resource for testing software that could 
be useful to future Mars 
missions without sacrificing our own continuing mission of exploration. This 
new software will be a 
baseline for development of flight software for Mars Science Laboratory, but 
it's also helpful in 
operating Spirit and Opportunity."  NASA's Mars Science Laboratory is a 
next-generation Mars rover 
in development for planned launch in 2009.

Spirit and Opportunity have worked on Mars for nearly 12 times as long as their 
originally planned 
prime missions of 90 Martian days. Spirit has driven about 6.9 kilometers (4.3 
miles); Opportunity 
has driven about 9.8 kilometers (6.1 miles). Spirit has returned more than 
88,500 images, Opportunity 
more than 80,700. All the raw images are available online at 
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/ .

Currently, Spirit is investigating rocks and soils near a ridge where it kept 
its solar panels tilted 
toward the sun during the Martian winter. Opportunity is exploring "Victoria 
Crater," where cliffs in 
the crater wall expose rock layers with clues about a larger span of Mars 
history than the rover has 
previously examined.

Opportunity's key discovery since landing has been mineral and rock-texture 
evidence that water 
drenched and flowed over the surface in at least one region of Mars long ago.   
Spirit has found 
evidence that water in some form has altered mineral composition of some soils 
and rocks in older 
hills above the plain where the rover landed.    

Among the rovers' many other accomplishments:

-- Opportunity has analyzed a series of exposed rock layers recording changing 
environmental 
conditions from the times when the layers were deposited and later modified.  
Wind-blown dunes 
came and went. The water table fluctuated.

-- Spirit has recorded dust devils forming and moving, events which were made 
into movie clips. 
These provide new insight into the interaction of Mars' atmosphere and surface.

-- Both rovers have found metallic meteorites on Mars.  Opportunity found one 
rock with a 
composition similar to a meteorite that reached Earth from Mars.

NASA's Mars Technology Program and New Millennium Program sponsored development 
of the 
new capabilities included in the new flight software.

JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, manages 
the Mars Exploration 
Rover Project for the NASA Science Mission Directorate.  For images and 
information about the 
rovers, visit http://www.nasa.gov/rovers . For descriptions of technologies 
being developed for future 
Mars missions, see http://marstech.jpl.nasa.gov . For information about the New 
Millennium 
Program's Space Technology 6 mission, see http://nmp.nasa.gov/st6/ .

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