The Curiosity rover drilled into a 12.9 kg (28.6 lb) rock on Mars on April 26, 2026. The rock got stuck to the drill bit and it took 5 days to shake off.

Credit: Space ​com | footage courtesy: NASA/JPL-Caltech | edited by Steve Spaleta

🎵 Arthur Benson, Pitfall (if you want the ​video with music, ​in the link below "source")

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Source

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=G_JNXTGHs9Q&pp=iggUQAFKEFA2NkVJZi05QzUyRXlnWGg%3D

You can find raw data from the mission, here:

1.5.26

https://mars.nasa.gov/msl/multimedia/raw-images/?order=sol+desc%2Cinstrument_sort+asc%2Csample_type_sort+asc%2C+date_taken+desc&per_page=50&page=0&mission=msl&begin_date=2026-05-01&end_date=2026-05-02​

25.4.26

https://mars.nasa.gov/msl/multimedia/raw-images/?order=sol+desc%2Cinstrument_sort+asc%2Csample_type_sort+asc%2C+date_taken+desc&per_page=50&page=0&mission=msl&begin_date=2026-04-25&end_date=2026-04-26​

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From NASA:

"Drilling has fractured or separated the upper layers of rocks in the past, but a rock has never remained attached to the drill sleeve. The team initially tried vibrating the drill to shake off the rock, but saw no change."

NASA's blog
https://science.nasa.gov/photojournal/nasas-curiosity-rover-frees-its-drill-from-a-rock/
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Full description from NASA:

This series of images shows NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover as it got a rock stuck to the drill on the end of its robotic arm and, after waving the arm and running the drill a few times, finally detached the rock. The imagery showing the entire process was captured by the black-and-white hazard cameras on the front of Curiosity’s chassis and by navigation cameras on its mast, or head.

On April 25, 2026, Curiosity drilled a sample from a rock nicknamed “Atacama,” which is an estimated 1.5 feet in diameter at its base, 6 inches thick and weighs roughly 28.6 pounds (13 kilograms). When the rover retracted its arm, the entire rock lifted out of the ground, suspended by the fixed sleeve that surrounds the rotating drill bit. Drilling has fractured or separated the upper layers of rocks in the past, but a rock has never remained attached to the drill sleeve. The team initially tried vibrating the drill to shake off the rock, but saw no change.

Then, on April 29, they tried reorienting Curiosity’s robotic arm and vibrating the drill again. Imagery in the GIF shows sand falling from Atacama, but the rock stayed attached to the rover.

Finally, on May 1, Curiosity’s team tried again, tilting the drill more, rotating and vibrating the drill, and spinning the drill bit. The team planned to perform these actions multiple times but the rock came off on the first round, fracturing as it hit the ground.



by Neaterntal

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26 Comments

  1. p8nt_junkie on

    What songs were chosen to play at the office during the shake-off work sessions?

  2. Neaterntal on

    Note: The video here has been processed at an increased playback speed than the original (space com), so that I can convert it to a GIF with few MB.

    As I have wrote, you can find the original processed video in the link above (post body).

    Thank you.

  3. Is the rover controlled by someone who’s never used a drill in their lives? Just brace the rock agains the ground and reverse the drill direction.

  4. MCEscherNYC on

    Pretty fragile rock. Also odd thickness for it’s shape. Seems more like semi-lithified mud stone.

  5. Hike_it_Out52 on

    That rock probably hasn’t moved in billions of years. Possibly since Mars had water. 

  6. ZestyPyramidScheme on

    Now the next rover will have an upgrade that helps get stuck rocks off.

    Granted, that upgrade could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. So I guess it’s a time value of money situation. Is spending that money worth the 5 days it took to shake it loose? Now that it’s happened, you can think of a worse case scenario which would be the rock never comes off without the upgrade. In that case, it would be worth the cost

  7. taktaga7-0-0 on

    A 12.9kg rock does not weigh 28.6lb on Mars. It weighs 10.9lb.

    Not even one stone lol

  8. That rock might be the first thing humans have accidentally broken on another planet lmao

  9. S30econdstoMars on

    It’s like you trying to take a piece of popcorn out of your tooth and spending the entire weekend obsessed.

  10. oldbastardbob on

    Let me guess. Nobody thought of putting a reverse switch on the drill.

  11. pottsygotlost on

    Imagine they’ve been drilling rocks to no success for 50 years and this doofus accidentally picks one up and a dozen roaches scatter