As a geology professor, Chris Herd teaches students what rocks to look for in the field.
His next student is a robot. Its field will be on Mars.
Herd is the only Canadian on the 10-member team advising NASA about how to organize a “sample return mission,” or mission that will travel to Mars and bring back rocks. The Ottawa native teaches at the University of Alberta.
No one has brought back space rocks since the last Apollo astronauts in 1972.
The next Mars mission launches this July. It won’t bring back rocks, but it will practise finding and collecting them — looking in particular for rocks that could hold signs of ancient life.
That, he hopes, could happen by 2031.
“You have to get a compelling suite of samples to bring back, and that’s really where the Mars 2020 rover and the role that we play is so important,” to find rocks “that will keep scientist on Earth working for generations” as the moon rocks did, he said.
Given that NASA hopes to bring back only a half-kilo of rock samples (about a pound), the pieces all need to have the right stuff.
This can mean fossil bacteria, organic chemicals left from long ago, or built-up layers of sediment that were once home to many bacteria (like Earth stromatolites).
His own background is studying meteorites from Mars, which are knocked loose by space collisions and float through space until Earth’s gravity pulls them in.
“This is big,” he said of the mission. This rover “is the first real step toward bringing samples back from Mars.”
The rover has instruments backed up by scientists and engineers who designed them, but not geologists — “people who know what you do in labs on Earth” once the rocks come back, Herd said.
The rover “is essentially our student, that’s right,” he said. “It’s a highly capable student with lots of instruments — but its brain is back on the Earth.”
Herd will attend the July launch. The rover arrives at Mars next February. After a couple of months, when the team checks out the machinery, Herd will be back and forth between Alberta and NASA. His work will be funded by the Canadian Space Agency.
One novelty on the next rover: It carries a mini-helicopter to help it explore. That’s right, a helicopter on a planet with almost no atmosphere.
“Kind of amazing, but they’ve tested it,” Herd said.
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