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Home Plate (Mars)








Home Plate (Mars)


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Home Plate

PIA09089-RA3-hirise-closeup annotated.png

HiRISE image of the "Home Plate" rock outcrop.

Feature type
Rock outcrop
Coordinates
14°36′S 175°30′E / 14.6°S 175.5°E / -14.6; 175.5Coordinates: 14°36′S 175°30′E / 14.6°S 175.5°E / -14.6; 175.5

Home Plate is a plateau roughly 90 m across within the Columbia Hills, Mars. It is informally named for its similarity in shape to a baseball home plate. Home Plate is a rocky outcrop that appears to show layered features.


The plateau has been extensively studied by Spirit, one of the Mars Exploration Rovers, since 2006. The rover became stuck in loose granular material alongside the northeast side of the plateau. The rover last communicated with Earth on March 22, 2010.[1]




Contents





  • 1 Exploration


  • 2 Origins


  • 3 Gallery


  • 4 See also


  • 5 References


  • 6 External links




Exploration[edit]


Spirit arrived at Home Plate on sol 744 (February 7, 2006) and has completed a scientific investigation with her robotic arm before moving to Low Ridge Haven due to power concerns. She returned on sol 1126 to resume those studies.


Spirit spent her third Martian winter on Home Plate's north edge.[2]






Home Plate (upper center), as seen from the summit of Husband Hill.




Origins[edit]


Scientists now believe that Home Plate is an explosive volcanic deposit. It is surrounded by deposits of basalt, which are believed to have exploded on contact with water. The presence of brine is further supported by the high concentration of chloride ions in the surrounding rocks. The presence of bomb sags (laminae typically found in beds of volcanish ash) seems to confirm this hypothesis.[3]


A patch of 90% pure opaline silicon dioxide was unearthed by Spirit in the vicinity of Home Plate. The patch is believed to be formed in acidic hydrothermal conditions, which supports the theory that Home Plate is of an explosive volcanic origin. Water is also present as mineral hydrates.[4][5]


Since 2008, scientists believe that this formation is an example of an eroded, ancient, and extinct fumarole.[6]



Gallery[edit]



See also[edit]




  • List of rocks on Mars


References[edit]




  1. ^ "Spirit Remains Silent at Troy". Retrieved April 21, 2012. 


  2. ^ Maggie McKee. "Mars rover Spirit to head north for the winter". Retrieved December 26, 2007. 


  3. ^ Squyres, S.; Aharonson, O.; Clark, B.C.; Cohen, B. A.; Crumpler, L.; De Souza, P. A.; Farrand, W. H.; Gellert, R.; Grant, J.; Grotzinger, J. P.; Haldemann, A. F. C.; Johnson, J. R.; Klingelhofer, G.; Lewis, K. W.; Li, R.; McCoy, T.; McEwen, A. S.; McSween, H. Y.; Ming, D. W.; Moore, J. M.; Morris, R. V.; Parker, T. J.; Rice, J. W.; Ruff, S.; Schmidt, M.; Schroder, C.; Soderblom, L. A.; Yen, A. (2007). "Pyroclastic Activity at Home Plate in Gusev Crater, Mars". Science. 316 (5825): 738–742. Bibcode:2007Sci...316..738S. doi:10.1126/science.1139045. PMID 17478719. 


  4. ^ "Mars Rover Spirit Unearths Surprise Evidence of Wetter Past". Retrieved May 30, 2007. 


  5. ^ Squyres; Arvidson, RE; Ruff, S; Gellert, R; Morris, RV; Ming, DW; Crumpler, L; Farmer, JD; et al. (2008). "Detection of Silica-Rich Deposits on Mars". Science. 320 (5879): 1063–1067. Bibcode:2008Sci...320.1063S. doi:10.1126/science.1155429. PMID 18497295. CS1 maint: Explicit use of et al. (link)


  6. ^ The Hydrothermal System at Home Plate in Gusev Crater, Mars, R.V.Morris, S.W.Squyres, -et al., Lunar & Planetary Science XXXIX(2008)



External links[edit]


  • Nasa's Mars Exploration Program


  • Current position of the Mars rovers - Home Plate is visible, with Spirit's journey around it.

  • The Planetary Society Weblog: Home, Sweet Home for Spirit

  • Official Mars Rovers site



















































Notable rocks on Mars

Adirondacksquare.jpg


PIA00819left-MarsRock-BarnacleBill.gif


PIA14762-MarsCuriosityRover-BathurstInletRock.jpg


MarsViking1Lander-BigJoeRock-19780211.jpg


Block Island.jpg


58606main image feature 167 jwfull.jpg


MarsCuriosityRover-CoronationRock-N165-20120817-crop.jpg


El Capitan sol27 pancam.jpg


Adirondack
(Spirit)

Barnacle Bill
(Sojourner)

Bathurst Inlet
(Curiosity)

Big Joe*
(Viking)

Block Island
(Opportunity) M

Bounce
(Opportunity)

Coronation
(Curiosity)

El Capitan
(Opportunity)

PIA17074-MarsOpportunityRover-EsperanceRock-20130223-fig1.jpg


PIA16187-MarsCuriosityRover-GoulburnRock-20120817-crop.jpg

PIA07269-Mars Rover Opportunity-Iron Meteorite.jpg


PIA09089-RA3-hirise-closeup annotated.png


PIA17062-MarsCuriosityRover-HottahRockOutcrop-20120915.jpg

PIA16192-MarsCuriosityRover-Target-JakeRock-20120927.jpg

PIA05482 modest.jpg


NASA Curiosity rover - Link to a Watery Past (692149main Williams-2pia16188-43).jpg


Esperance*
(Opportunity)

Goulburn
(Curiosity)

Heat Shield
(Opportunity) M

Home Plate
(Spirit)

Hottah
(Curiosity)

Jake Matijevic
(Curiosity)

Last Chance
(Opportunity)

Link
(Curiosity)

Mackinac Island.jpg

Mars rock Mimi by Spirit rover.jpg


PIA13418 - Oileán Ruaidh meteorite on Mars (false colour).jpg


Pot of gold upclose.jpg


PIA16452-MarsCuriosityRover-Rocknest3Rock-20121005.jpg


391243main-MarsRover-ShelterIslandMeteorite-20091002-crop.jpg


PIA16795-MarsCuriosityRover-TintinaRock-Context-20130119.jpg


NASA-MarsRock-Yogi-SuperRes.jpg


Mackinac Island
(Opportunity) M

Mimi*
(Spirit)

Oileán Ruaidh
(Opportunity) M

Pot of Gold
(Spirit)

Rocknest 3
(Curiosity)

Shelter Island
(Opportunity) M

Tintina
(Curiosity)

Yogi
(Sojourner)

The table above contains clickable linksNotes: * = linked article is about the mission that encountered this rock; M = Meteorite - ()









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