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Mars ExplorationConference Paper

Atacama Rover Astrobiology Drilling Studies Project: Final Year

20221 min read159 words
B Glass, A Davila, V. Parro, R Quinn, P Willis, W Brinckherhoff, K Zacny, K Warren-Rhodes, J DiRuggiero, M Wilhelm, L Kobayashi, D Bergman, T Stucky, S Seitz, A Dave, M. Moreno-Paz, C McKay, C Stoker, M Mora, F Kehl, R Bonaccorsi, A Grubisic, and M Castillo
Ames Research Center

The Atacama Rover Astrobiology Drilling Studies (ARADS) project, a simulated Mars rover biomarker detection mission, was iteratively developed over four years from 2015 -2019, including three NASA centers, the Centro de Astrobiologia, Johns Hopkins University, Honeybee Robotics, Maxar and the University of Antofagasta. The final (4th) ARADS field season, in 2019, tested an integrated mobile life-prospecting platform loosely inspired by the 2000’s Astrobiology Field Laboratory concept, with a 1m rotary-percussive drill and sample transfer robot arm that fed three astrobiology instruments operating in-situ on the KREX2 medium rover prototype. A fourth instrument was field tested earlier in 2019 due to flight mission requirements. In the final ARADS field deployment in September 2019, the project conducted a remote mission operation simulation (Stoker 2022)demonstrating sample drilling, acquisition and transfer into the rover instruments (while minimizing cross-contamination), performing in-situ analysis of the samples, and returning the results to a remote science operations team(which commanded the daily science goals and uploaded operations sequences).


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