It's a writing day today! It's been a long time since I've paid close attention to #Curiosity activities, so today my goal is to orient myself to time and place on the mission. In this thread I'll share the resources I use to figure that out. #CuriosityBook #amwriting #scicomm #science #space
My first book gave a very brief overview of the mission up to sol 1648, at which point the rover had crossed the Bagnold dune field and was headed to Vera Rubin Ridge. At JPL's "Where Is the Rover Now?" page I can see a dynamic map of the rover's position and past route. It's now sol 3771.
https://mars.nasa.gov/msl/mission/where-is-the-rover/
The pics here are from my book and a screencap from the JPL website. #CuriosityBook #scicomm #science #space
My next stop for information on rover activities is the Analyst's Notebook, a browse tool to landed spacecraft data hosted by the Geosciences node of the Planetary Data System, which is located at Wash U. St. Louis. Do you like data from space? Check this out. I love the Analyst's notebook for how it provides an interface to a whole data collection together.
https://an.rsl.wustl.edu/
This part may take me a while as I swim in #OpenData