The five wheels that still rotate on NASA’s Mars Exploration Rover Spirit have been slipping severely in soft soil during recent attempts to drive, sinking the wheels about halfway into the ground.

The rover team of engineers and scientists has suspended driving Spirit temporarily while studying the ground around the rover and planning simulation tests of driving options with a test rover at NASAโ€™s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

โ€œSpirit is in a very difficult situation,โ€ JPLโ€™s John Callas, project manager for Spirit and its twin rover, Opportunity, said Monday. โ€œWe are proceeding methodically and cautiously. It may be weeks before we try moving Spirit again. Meanwhile, we are using Spiritโ€™s scientific instruments to learn more about the physical properties of the soil that is giving us trouble.โ€


NASA Mars Rover Spirit checks out a layered rock at Home Plate.

Both Spirit and Opportunity have operated more than five years longer than their originally planned missions of three months on Mars and have driven much farther than designed. The rover team has so far developed ways to cope with various symptoms of aging on both rovers.

Spirit has been driving counterclockwise from north to south around a low plateau called โ€œHome Plateโ€ for two months. The rover progressed 122 meters (400 feet) on that route before reaching its current position.

In the past week, the digging-in of Spiritโ€™s wheels has raised concerns that the roverโ€™s belly pan could now be low enough to contact rocks underneath the chassis, which would make getting out of the situation more difficult. The right-front wheel on Spirit stopped working three years ago. Driving with just five powered wheels while dragging or pushing an immobile wheel adds to the challenge of the situation.

Favorably, three times in the past month, wind has removed some of the dust accumulated on Spiritโ€™s solar panels. This increases the roverโ€™s capability for generating electricity.

โ€œThe improved power situation buys us time,โ€ Callas said. โ€œWe will use that time to plan the next steps carefully. We know that dust storms could return at any time, although the skies are currently clear.โ€

Behavioral problems that Spirit exhibited in early April — episodes of amnesia, computer resets and failure to wake for communications sessions — have not recurred in the past three weeks, though investigations have yet to diagnose the root causes.

JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the Mars Exploration Rover project for NASAโ€™s Science Mission Directorate, Washington.