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Perseverance spots a doughnut-shaped rock

Doughnut-shaped rock in Jezero Crater
Click for original image.

The Mars rover has spent the last few months exploring just beyond the western rim of half-mile-wide Belva crater, which sits on top of the delta that eons ago flowed into 30-mile-wide Jezero Crater. During that time the science team has been using its various cameras to study the surrounding terrain.

One of those cameras is the SuperCam Remote Micro Imager. This camera is a variation of Curiosity’s ChemCam, designed initially to look very closely at nearby objects. The Curiosity team however discovered they could also use ChemCam to look at distant objects, and in this case the Perseverance team was doing the same with SuperCam, gazing outward at more remote features.

The result was the picture to the right, cropped, reduced, brightened, and sharpened to post here. It was taken on June 23, 2023, and shows what appears to be a several-foot-wide rock with a hole in its center. According to the SETI Institute’s tweet that publicized the picture, the rock might be “a large meteorite alongside smaller pieces.”

If this was Curiosity I would be certain the science team would take the rover close to the rock. The Perseverance team however seems to have different goals, mostly centered on finding drill spots for obtaining its core samples for later return to Earth. It has not therefore been as exploratory as Curiosity. It seems to have rarely diverged from its planned route, and when it has it has not done so to look at singular features like this. We shall see what they finally decide.

Genesis cover

On Christmas Eve 1968 three Americans became the first humans to visit another world. What they did to celebrate was unexpected and profound, and will be remembered throughout all human history. Genesis: the Story of Apollo 8, Robert Zimmerman's classic history of humanity's first journey to another world, tells that story, and it is now available as both an ebook and an audiobook, both with a foreword by Valerie Anders and a new introduction by Robert Zimmerman.

 
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"Not simply about one mission, [Genesis] is also the history of America's quest for the moon... Zimmerman has done a masterful job of tying disparate events together into a solid account of one of America's greatest human triumphs."--San Antonio Express-News

8 comments

  • Doubting Thomas

    Robert – Respectfully:

    “Pocket” versus “Rocket”? Maybe?

  • Doubting Thomas: My readers are beginning to consistently see evidence of my age. I have fixed this. Thank you.

  • Doubting Thomas

    Robert – Like your “Donut” description. How could NASA NOT have the desire to peak into the hole?

    I guess, per your other posts, that they have $10 Billion burning a hole in their pocket and they are hot to justify spending it on sample return.

    Here is a thought exercise for you: What is the dollar value that would need to be given to SpaceX to just go get samples themselves independent of NASA?

    Same question for the concept of a crewed landing on the moon? Adherence to Artemis architecture nor NASA skin color and genitalia preferences of the crew not a factor in option chosen.

    Either or both would Dis NASA but probably would get us into space quicker.

  • Bill Farrand

    It’s a Fe-Ni meteorite. Spirit, Opportunity, and Curiosity have seen a lot of such objects which often have odd, contorted shapes. Perseverance could identify it remotely either with Mastcam-Z multispectral data or point reflectance spectra from SuperCam.

  • kerry garrett

    Now THAT’S evidence of intelligent life! Was there a large cup-a-Jo shaped boulder nearby?

  • GaryMike

    I have a humorous, or two or more, possible explanation(s).

    Inappropriate for this place.

    Maybe we should be fearing something we may not be able to defend ourselves against.

    Hopefully they’re already gone or dead.

  • Jeff

    “Mars Guy” covered this unusual rock in his last video.
    https://youtu.be/QLG7HiZNETc
    4.27

  • pzatchok

    It looks like the Guardian of Forever from the Star Trek episode The City on the Edge of Forever

    Maybe they can send a probe through it.

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