Recently published paper discussing the attractions of Meridiani Planum for the first crewed mission to Mars. Based on presentations at the first landing site workshop last year.
Highlights
• The Meridiani Planum area is an excellent candidate for crewed missions to Mars.
• It provides an accessible and safe area for landing and exploration.
• Potential water resources exist in the form of poly-hydrated magnesium sulphates.
• There are diverse science features that meet crewed Mars mission science goals.
Media story
http://www.seeker.com/risks-on-mars-mean-humans-should-follow-the-tracks-of-opportunity-rove-2293053488.htmlLink to paywalled paper at
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0094576516307202ABSTRACT
Astronauts working on the surface of Mars have the capability to explore efficiently, rapidly, and flexibly,
allowing them to perform a wide range of field investigations. NASA has begun an open international process to
identify and evaluate candidate locations where crews could land, live and work on the martian surface,
beginning with the First Landing Site/Exploration Zone Workshop for Human Missions to the Surface of Mars
in October 2015. Forty seven sites were proposed, including several at or near the Meridiani area, the subject of
this paper. We consider the Meridiani area an excellent candidate for the first missions to Mars. It is accessible,
safe, contains potential water resources in the form of poly-hydrated magnesium sulphates, has diverse science
features with high likelihood of meeting all science goals, has other potential resources and potential for further
longer-ranged exploration. The presence of hardware from previous missions will be of benefit to studies of
materials to martian conditions, assessing the effectiveness of historic planetary protection strategies, and
engaging public interest. Lastly, parts of the Meridiani region have been well studied from the surface by the
Opportunity mission, providing ground truth for orbital data. As one of the best documented regions of Mars
this will allow a “Go where you know” approach for the first crewed missions, especially with regard to safety,
trafficability, and water resource potential.
I have the full paper if people are interested in discussing.