|
Written by Lu Xu
|
|
Tuesday, 01 February 2005 |
The rover body is called the warm electronics box, or "WEB"
for short. Like a car body, the rover body is a strong, outer layer that
protects the rover's computer, electronics, and batteries.
The Rover cannot function well under excessively hot or cold temperatures.
In order to survive during all of the various mission phases, the rover's
parts must be in temperature range of -40° Celsius to +40° Celsius.
Heaters are packed inside the rover body and the WEB walls help keeps
the heat in when the night temperatures on Mars can drop to -96° Celsius.
The rover's body also releases excess heat through its radiators.
There are several methods engineers used to keep the rover at the right
temperature: |
|
Diagram showing materials used for different layers of the rover body |
|
- The body of the rover is painted with a gold coating from the outside.
This reflective coating prevents transfer of heat in the rover to the
surroundings.
- The rover is also kept warm by a special layer of insulation, called
solid silica aerogel. This material prevents heat from escaping outside
of the rover body walls. Aerogel traps heat inside the rover body. It
is a unique silicon-based substance nicknamed "solid smoke"
because it is 99.8% air. Aerogel is one thousand times less dense than
glass, so it is extraordinarily lightweight, which makes it much cheaper
and easier to launch and fly to Mars.
|
[
NEXT ]
|
|
Last Updated ( Saturday, 09 July 2005 )
|