AMASE 2009 – ExoMars PanCam

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Objectives Investigations
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Overview From
9–23 August, 40 scientists and engineers involved in Mars exploration took
part in the Arctic Mars Analogue Svalbard Expedition (AMASE) 2009 in the
Svalbard archipelago, The
scientific goal of AMASE is to study the geology, geophysics, biosignatures,
and life forms that can be found in volcanic complexes, warm springs,
subsurface ice, and sedimentary deposits considered
good analogues to sites on ancient Mars. This work was carried out using
instruments, a rover, and techniques that will/may be used in future
planetary missions, such as NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) or ESA’s
ExoMars. While
the expedition was underway, researchers lived and worked either in a
research station in Ny Alesund or on board the R/V Lance, a 60m research
vessel. This ship is run by the Norwegian Polar Institute and is operated
primarily in This
year, the ExoMars PanCam team, supported by the EC FP7-SPACE Project PRoVisG,
participated for the second year with a PanCam demonstrator (ExoMars teams
were invited by ESA, under Prodex funding). Main field campaign objectives
were to perform stand-alone as well as integrated ExoMars instrument
deployments with the objective to:
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