Learn how to drive Curiosity on Mars
Blog Post
- Published: Sep 6, 2012
- Author: Jon Evans
- Channels: Detectors / Gas Chromatography / HPLC / Electrophoresis / Proteomics & Genomics / Ion Chromatography / Laboratory Informatics / Sample Preparation / NMR Knowledge Base / Chemometrics & Informatics / Atomic / Raman / Proteomics / X-ray Spectrometry / Infrared Spectroscopy / Base Peak / MRI Spectroscopy / UV/Vis Spectroscopy
The Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) is offering an insight into what it's like to drive Nasa's Curiosity Mars rover, by hosting a live online question-and-answer session with rover driver Paolo Bellutta on Friday 7 September at 16:00BST. The session will be broadcast on the RSC YouTube channel and members of the public can sumbit questions for Bellutta via Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or email.
Curiosity is on Mars to to search for evidence that the planet may once have harbored life. In support of this mission, it is equipped with 180lb of analytical instruments, including a gas chromatograph, a mass spectrometer and a tunable laser spectrometer (see Big SAM hits Mars).
(Photo of Curiosity arm on Mars courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS).
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