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  • [♪ INTRO]

  • It finally happened.

  • Last week, after eight months of listening and hoping, NASA and the entire world

  • had to say goodbye to the Opportunity rover on Mars.

  • [sniff] I'm not crying; you're crying.

  • The end of the mission was thanks to a planet-wide dust storm

  • that started last May and obscured the Sun for months.

  • It blocked too much light for too long, which prevented Oppy's solar panels

  • from charging its batteries and keeping its internal electronics warm enough to work.

  • NASA first lost contact with the rover back in June, and despite sending it

  • thousands of signals, and even accounting for the possibility of things like broken radios,

  • they just never heard from it again.

  • So last Wednesday, the team decided it was officially time to put the rover to bed.

  • Now, Opportunity stands as a monument to human achievement.

  • But even though we've officially had to say goodbye,

  • that hasn't stopped some people from wondering if we'd tried harder, could we have saved Oppy?

  • The short answer is not really, at least,

  • not unless engineers had designed the rover differently from the beginning.

  • Since Opportunity was mainly powered by solar panels,

  • it was always at the mercy of giant dust storms like this.

  • And since there aren't any other rovers nearby, it's not like we could have

  • sent something over to brush it off.

  • So even from the start, engineers knew that a bunch of dust would be bad news.

  • Now, if Oppy had been powered by nuclear energy, like the Curiosity rover,

  • it would have survived, no problem.

  • But back when Opportunity was designed, solar panels were really the only viable option.

  • Even today, the type of plutonium that Curiosity uses to charge its batteries is in super short supply,

  • the majority of it actually came from making nuclear weapons during the Cold War.

  • So back when Opportunity was being built, NASA primarily used it for deep-space missions,

  • like the Voyagers or New Horizons.

  • Opportunity was given a tiny bit of plutonium to generate heat,

  • but that was mainly to help supplement the electrical heaters, which were powered by solar panels.

  • I mean, to be fair, Oppy was originally made for a 90-day mission,

  • so it's not like it needed a bunch of plutonium.

  • And really, even if this storm had never come along, the rover would have died eventually.

  • Its batteries were slowly becoming less and less efficient, so even if the skies on Mars

  • had stayed beautiful and clear, Opportunity would have eventually lost power.

  • So one way or another, our rover wasn't going to last forever.

  • But that doesn't take away from the fact that it did amazing work during its 15 years of operation.

  • Opportunity was the first rover to identify sedimentary rocks on another world,

  • and it discovered what came to be calledblueberries”.

  • They're gray spheres of a mineral called hematite that formed from acidic groundwater.

  • And speaking of water, Oppy also found veins of gypsum at the rim of a crater,

  • which were likely deposited by water, along with clay minerals

  • in the crater that suggest it could have been hospitable to life.

  • And in the end, it sent us over 200,000 images that will produce even more science

  • and inspire us for years to come.

  • Oh, and all of this was despite a lot of setbacks.

  • While it was on Mars, Opportunity got trapped in a sand dune,

  • survived another planet-wide dust storm, lost steering capabilities of its two front wheels,

  • and also lost the ability to use its flash memory.

  • So it's kind of poetic that its final resting place is near Mars's equator in a place called Perseverance Valley.

  • For more than a decade, Opportunity has been one of our best tools for understanding Mars,

  • and the scientists who drove it and analyzed its data have made the best of a lot of tough situations.

  • But the good news is, even while we're mourning the loss of Opportunity,

  • we can still look to humanity's other efforts to understand the Red Planet, too.

  • For example, the Curiosity rover is still ticking and making new observations all the time.

  • And NASA's InSight lander recently finished setting up its suite of instruments on Mars

  • to study what's going on underneath the planet's surface.

  • And there are two more rovers in the immediate works as well.

  • The ESA's Rosalind Franklin will explore an area near the Martian equator after it arrives in 2021.

  • And that same year, NASA's currently-unnamed Mars 2020 rover is set to land a bit farther east.

  • So even though the Opportunity rover is shut down for good, there's a lot to look forward to on Mars.

  • And maybe one day, when we start sending humans to the Red Planet,

  • we'll be able to brush off the dust and tell Oppy how it exceeded our expectations

  • and did a good job right up until the very end.

  • If you want to keep up with all of these missions, and the discoveries we're going to make,

  • follow along by subscribing at youtube.com/scishowspace.

  • And as always, thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space News!

  • [♪ OUTRO]

[♪ INTRO]

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