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SAM Sniffs the Martian Atmosphere












NASA's Curiosity rover uses SAM (Sample Analysis at Mars) to make the most sensitive measurements ever to search for methane gas on the red planet. The analytical tools in SAM are a mass spectrometer built by NASA Goddard, a gas chromatograph built by French partners supported by France's national space agency in Paris, and a laser spectrometer built by JPL. SAM's sample manipulation system, including 74 sample cups for carrying powdered samples to two ovens, was built by Honeybee Robotics, New York. Curiosity's robotic arm will deliver powdered samples, drilled from rocks or scooped from soil, to SAM's inlet tubes on top of the rover deck. Ovens will heat most samples to about 1000 degrees Celsius (about 1800 degrees Fahrenheit). SAM will take in atmospheric samples through separate ports on the side of the rover. Inside SAM are more than 600 meters (more than 650 yards) of wiring, 52 micro-valves, a soft-drink-can-size pump that rotates 100000 times per minute, and many other components. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

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