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  • Back in February, the Opportunity rover celebrated its 5000th Martian day on the planet next door.

  • And that's a seriously amazing accomplishment, because Oppy was originally scheduled to operate

  • for, like, three months.

  • In that time, it's had to weather some pretty significant hardships, too, including a brush

  • with death in 2007.

  • That year, a planet-wide dust storm blocked out 99% of direct sunlight for weeks, which

  • isn't a great time when you're powered by solar panels.

  • Now, at this very moment, Oppy is fighting for its life again, thanks to another huge dust storm.

  • And we're really hoping it's going to be okay.

  • Because after almost 15 years, a lot of peoplemyself includedare pretty attached

  • to this thing.

  • Opportunity landed on Mars in 2004, and it's currently roving around the western edge of

  • Endeavour Crater.

  • Well, it would be roving, if it weren't for a giant dust storm blotting out the Sun.

  • Continent-sized dust storms happen every Martian year or so, and they're caused by similar

  • processes to storms on Earththings like Sun-warmed air rising and picking up dust.

  • But unlike around here, these storms get so big every few years that Mars's entire atmosphere

  • turns into one giant light blocker.

  • Opportunity hasn't seen one of these giant dust storms since back in '07, and it's

  • difficult to know when exactly they'll happen.

  • But this one wasn't totally unexpected.

  • About six months ago, astronomers predicted we'd see something this year as Mars's

  • orbit took it closer to the Sun and it got a bit warmeramong some other factors.

  • NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter first detected this storm on May 30th, and it now

  • covers roughly a quarter of the planet's surface.

  • When we filmed this video on Tuesday, it wasn't a planet-wide storm like we saw in 2007.

  • But from Oppy's perspective, it's a lot worse in terms of the amount of light being blocked out.

  • In fact, this is the most opaque dust storm we've ever observed.

  • And that's not good news for the rover's solar panels or its power levels.

  • On June 12th, NASA engineers attempted to communicate with Oppy, but did not hear back.

  • This likely means the rover's batteries are getting low and that it's entered what's

  • calledlow power fault mode”, where basically all subsystems are shut off except the master clock.

  • The rover's computer can occasionally wake up to check its power levels, but we won't

  • hear anything from it again until its batteries are full enough to exit that mode.

  • If it ever does.

  • With so many systems shut down, the rover can't keep itself warm, either.

  • So if Opportunity goes without sufficient power for too long, it'll basically freeze to death.

  • So, we'll just wait to hear back from itin silenceany day, now...

  • Luckily, Endeavour Crater is warming up as the Southern Hemisphere heads into its summer season.

  • And the dust storm is helping to keep the area warmer than it would otherwise be.

  • Current estimates suggest that Opportunity will survive the ordeal, but we don't know

  • exactly how long this storm's going to last.

  • Because there's so little water in Mars's thin atmosphere, dust can float around for months.

  • So it will definitely be a while before Oppy's solar panels will can get things fully operational.

  • If there's any good news, though, it's that the Curiosity rover will be fine.

  • It's also seeing skies dim way over in Gale Crater, but it relies on nuclear power, not solar panels.

  • Along with NASA's other robot immigrants, it will even do a little science while we

  • wait for this storm to pass.

  • It, along with our three orbiters, will record things like temperatures and pressures at

  • the surface and in the various parts of the atmosphere.

  • They'll also monitor the characteristics of the dust particles being flung around.

  • Studying this storm will help scientists better understand Mars's weather, which will hopefully

  • allow us to predict future weather events one day.

  • But hopefully we won't have to sacrifice one of our favorite robots to get there.

  • Now while Mars is whipping dust around, a paper published in Nature Geoscience this

  • week reports that the wind on our other planetary neighbor is changing the length of its days.

  • Of all the planets in our solar system, Venus hasby far and awaythe longest day.

  • It's about 243 Earth days long.

  • Yeah.

  • 8 months.

  • But weirdly, measurements can't seem to pin down exactly how long it is.

  • They aren't off by muchless than 10 minutesbut it's enough of a curiosity

  • that astronomers are trying to determine what's happening.

  • One team hypothesized that the difference might be partially caused by the interactions

  • between Venus's thick atmosphere and its hot nightmare of a surface.

  • Their idea was inspired after Japan's Akatsuki spacecraft observed a super long, bow-shaped

  • feature at the top of the atmosphere in 2015.

  • See, Venus's atmosphere rotates around the planet 60 times faster than the ground beneath

  • italthough we don't know why.

  • But that bow-shaped structure is somehow relatively stationary above a mountainous region on the

  • continent called Aphrodite Terra.

  • The team ran computer simulations of Venus's atmosphere and confirmed that the structure

  • is most likely an atmospheric gravity wave caused by the surface topography.

  • Gravity waves aren't the same as gravitational wavesthe ripples in spacetime that happen

  • when things like black holes collide.

  • Instead, they're waves made of air that are forced to ripple up and down.

  • This can happen after air hits a mountain and gets shot upward, then pulled back down by gravity.

  • At that point, the air's momentum keeps it bobbing up and down until it settles back

  • to equilibrium.

  • The simulations showed that the amount of torque these waves exert on Venus's surface

  • are enough to cause the planet's rotation to vary by a couple of minutes.

  • It's not enough to explain all of the differences in measurement, but it was a fairly simplified model.

  • With more data, tracking the change in the length of day will ultimately allow astronomers

  • to figure out why Venus spins the way it does, which we don't actually have a definitive

  • answer for.

  • Admittedly, another way we could try and solve that mystery is by sending a lander or rover

  • to Venusbut it's terrible there.

  • Opportunity is having a hard enough time on Mars where it's relatively static and lead

  • isn't a liquid.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space!

  • And a special thanks to our President of Space, Matthew Brant!

  • Thank you so much for your support.

  • If you'd like to keep up with the latest news from around the solar systemand

  • the rest of the universeyou can go to youtube.com/scishowspace and subscribe.

  • We post a news episode like this every Friday.

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