
NASA / JPL-Caltech / MSSS
This self-portrait of NASA's Curiosity rover was assembled from dozens of images captured by the rover's Mars Hand Lens Imager on Feb. 3. Because of the way the pictures were taken, the rover's robotic arm is not visible in this mosaic.
LOS ANGELES — Curiosity hunkered down Wednesday after the sun unleashed a blast that raced toward Mars.
While the hardy rover was designed to withstand punishing space weather, its handlers decided to power it down as a precaution since it suffered a recent computer problem. "We're being more careful," said project manager Richard Cook of the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which runs the $2.5 billion mission.
While Curiosity slept, the Opportunity rover and two NASA spacecraft circling overhead carried on with normal activities.
On Tuesday, scientists noticed a huge flare erupting from the sun that hurled a stream of radiation in Mars' direction. The solar burst also spawned a cloud of superheated gas that barreled toward the Red Planet at 2 million mph (3.2 million kilometers per hour). The eruption did not appear severe or extreme, but "middle of the road, all things considered" said space weather chief Bob Rutledge at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The solar tempest was not expected to have an impact on Earth. In the past, such outbursts have triggered solar storms with the ability to disrupt utility grids, airline flights, satellite networks and GPS services. They're also known to produce shimmering auroras in places farther from the poles.
Since Mars lacks a planetwide magnetic field, it does not experience geomagnetic storms. Rather, the planet sees a spike in radiation, Rutledge said.
Powerful solar blasts can cause trouble to Mars spacecraft. In 2003, an intense solar flare knocked out the radiation detector on the Odyssey orbiter.
NASA does not expect similar drama from the latest solar activity. In the worst-case scenario, one or more of the working Mars spacecraft may enter "safe mode" in which science activities are halted, but they remain in contact with Earth.
"We'll be watching and seeing what happens," said Roger Gibbs, JPL deputy manager for the Mars exploration program.
The unsettled space weather comes as Curiosity is recovering from a memory hiccup that put its science experiments on hold. It was the first major problem to hit the car-sized rover since it landed last year in an ancient crater near the Martian equator to hunt for the chemical building blocks of life.
Engineers were in the middle of troubleshooting when they decided to wait for the weather to pass. The delay means it'll take longer for Curiosity to return to analyzing the pinch of rock powder it collected from a recent drilling.
Since its instruments are turned off, it can't use its radiation sensor to track the solar particles. "It's just bad timing," Cook said.
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Good luck Curiosity, hope you make it out unscathed!
Dysney Studeos is making mega bucks off this fiasco!.... EXPLAIN HOW A ROBOT ALONE COULD TAKE A SELF PHOTO = WITHOUT A SUPPORTING ARM BEING VISABLE IN THE PICTURE???? = ARE PEOPLE REALLY THIS STUPID????? ROTFLMFAOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
and WE HAVE NOT WALKED ON THE MOON! .... NASA HAS NO MOVIES OR PHOTOS OR PROOF THAT WE DID IT! = enter Dysney again, yup.
ALL SHOW & NOGO = EXCUSE FOR GOVT HIDING WASTED MONEY, yep.
TROLL alert!
The spelling alone is hilarious.
Yup. Walt Disney is probably spinning in his grave.
Thanks, oldsmoker. I really needed a good belly laugh today. ;)
This has been explained to you before.
Weird. Why are the uninformed, ignorant, and pseudo-educated always the ones who can figure out these hoaxes. Do they think that scientists would want to discover hoaxes also?
I guess after they figured out Santa Claus was a hoax when they graduated high school, they don't trust anyone.
Actually it is very easy to do photos which eliminate items such as the arm that holds the camera. I do this kind of photography all the time. It is very easy using any photo editing software like Mgi Photo Suite, or Paintshop Pro. Just take two pictures, one from each side of the subject with the camera at the same location for each picture. Then combine the left half of one picture with the right half of the other picture to make the one without the object holding the camera. I have done pictures like this with myself in each half of the picture making it look like I have an identical twin. I also do 3-D pictures that work in a 1904 stereo viewer all from my single lens Canon T1 Rebel, taking two pictures of the same subject each a few inches to the left or right of each other. Then print them out side by side on card stock the size used in the stereo viewer. Works really well!
Either that or ask a Martian to take your pic in front of Gale crater
Curiosity won't be able to wait out the dust blitz from Comet C2013/A1 if it impacts Mars. That will bury it under 5 to 10 feet of Martian dust--if not outright blast it to bits from falling Meteors after the blast.
That Comet is the story of the EON if it hits the blast will be visible in broad daylight from Earth by naked eye.
It's huge at 30 miles and 1800 times more energetic than the dino killer 65 million years ago.
That's astounding if it hits. Absolutely astounding. Will dwarf Shoemaker 9 that hit Jupiter--and that produced a plume bigger than the Earth itself. What this one will do is probably make a 500 mile crater up to 3 miles deep. Some reports are 600 miles by 6 miles. Others are 300 miles by 2 miles. Regardless it will be HUGE and throw out an immense amount of Martian rocks into space--Martian meteors which could impact Earth in early 2015.
Let's hope it misses everything.
@more2bits, I thought it was a solar flare, not a meteor. Let's not be fooled that what happens on Mars will not affect us somehow. According to Sir Isaac Newton's 3rd law, there is no such thing as a unidirectional force or a force that acts on only one body.
@oldsmokerusa...Like the name by the way...very creative. Space travel is not impossible. I'm one of the biggest conspiracy theorists I know, but I believe the astronauts have gone to space. They are the scouts for those planning on leaving us behind. You think it's the 144,000 the bible speaks of, that will be taken up in the rapture? The prime real estate and natural resources that I know have been found are the impetus for them to step up the game. While the world is in chaos and being distracted, one day we'll awaken from a slumber only to find that we've been left behind
It's going to be a factor when humans occupy Mars. They will have to be protected from radiation especially a concentrated one. Hope we have some settlements in the next 10 years.