THIS IS THE APXS.

THE STORY OF CANADA’S CONTRIBUTION TO THE CURIOSITY MARS ROVER

CANADIAN MADE

Designed, built and operated from Canada by a team of geologists, engineers, and scientists.

CURIOUSITY

Mounted on the arm of the solar system’s most famous robotic explorer as it roams the Martian landscape

A KEY TOOL FOR A
ROBOT GEOLOGIST

It is used to determine what rocks and soils are made of, providing important clues to geologists working to solve the mysteries of the Red Planet.

CLEVER & COMPACT

It uses tiny but powerful radioactive sources to excite targets in place on Mars

MAKING A MEASUREMENT ON MARS




The process begins as the rover extends its arm towards an important target selected by science operations team for detailed APXS analysis.


The turret, with APXS at the forefront, moves to close contact. As the instrument gets close, its radioactive sources begin to excite atoms in the target.


The excitation causes the atoms in the target to emit characteristic X-rays of their own, which are measured and counted by the detector.


Soon a picture, called a spectrum, starts to form. The Canadian team analyzes the spectrum to understand precisely which elements are present in the target, as well as their abundances

LEARN MORE ABOUT THE APXS

OPERATIONS

Approximately every X hours DFE commands are sent to the rover. The rover sends data to the MRO & Odessey satelites which then send the data back to the Curiosity team to analyze.

CANADA’S CONTRIBUTION

APXS is a fundamental part of the Curiosity mission which enables the rover to determine the chemical composition of the rocks and soil on Mars.

TEAM BLOG

Lorem ipsum dolor sit, consecteture adi picsing elit. January 30, 2017
Lorem ipsum dolor sit, consecteture adi picsing elit. January 30, 2017
Lorem ipsum dolor sit, consecteture adi picsing elit. January 30, 2017

APXS ALPHA PARTICLE X-RAY SPECTROMETER