NASA Jet Propulsion
Lab Briefing
October 6, 2014
The Mars Sample
Return spacecraft was designed to land on Mars, retrieve a
soil sample, and return it to Earth. After a nominal transit
from Earth, the spacecraft successfully landed on the surface
of Mars on September 11, 2012. The landing site in Gusev
crater was carefully chosen to be near Columbia Memorial
Station, in order to overlap with the exploration conducted by
the Spirit Rover from 2004 to 2009. Unfortunately, all
communication from the Mars Sample Return lander ceased the
day after the landing (cause undetermined), and the mission
was considered a failure.
Two days ago, a brief message on the Sample Return probe
telemetry frequency was received by elements of the Deep Space
Network. From the signal strength, direction of the signal and high
upward shift in frequency, NASA determined that the probe was in
space and rapidly approaching Earth! It is a complete mystery how
the probe managed to launch itself and navigate back to Earth
without commands or communication of any kind with ground
controllers.
While statistical analysis of the mysterious message proved that
the transmission was not noise and was not garbled, the message
used an unfamiliar encoding scheme. Retired NASA scientists who
were involved in earlier Mars exploration have suggested that the
message may be in an octal code developed and used by the Planetary
Society in 2004 for public affairs involvement with the Spirit
Rover, as part of a program entitled 'Red Rover goes to Mars.' None
of the scientists were able to recall how to decrypt this code,
however.
As an expert solver of puzzle caches, NASA has asked you to
examine archived files from the Planetary Society website to assist
in decoding the message, and possibly determine the touchdown
location of the sample return capsule. Refer to the links below to
view the archived files.
Archived link #1
Archived link #2
Bonus
If you've decoded the Sample
Return message, it should be no problem to decrypt the message
that is on the edge of the DVD bolted to the Mars Exploration
Rover spacecraft on Mars. E-mail me the solution to log
another find. Click the picture at the left for a larger image
of the DVD.