The Mars Aqua Retrieval System (MARS) is an early model of simply such a prospecting wanderer, created through a coordinated effort between the Singapore University of Technology and Design, and Australia’s Gilmour Space Technologies.
The essential thought is to expand upon revelations made by Curiosity and the Phoenix Mars Lander, among others that show water is available on the Red Planet, either covered in its dirt or in non-fluid structures like ice. MARS is intended to separate the water from the dirt, gather and store it. As per nitty gritty documentation of the undertaking, different routines were considered for every progression of the procedure, with the last idea including the utilization of microwaves and a frosty trap to gather the fluid. Every cycle of the water-gathering procedure includes utilizing a somewhat essential headway framework with two controlled wheels to move to the objective territory, then bringing down a microwave unit over the ground and utilizing it to warm up the zone for 20 minutes. The subsequent steam then enters accumulation channels prompting a condenser sack where it gathers and dribbles into an accumulation box. The entire cycle will appear to be recognizable to any individual who knows anything about the refining procedure.
The group guarantees it has possessed the capacity to gather water from solidified soil at a rate of four grams for every four minutes in tests. With a small spending plan of just US$10,000, the group figured out how to make a model intended to work on Earth utilizing recognizable segments including Arduino and Raspberry Pi units, however with the capacity to likewise withstand 30 percent of Mars’ temperature and weight conditions. Gilmour Space CEO Adam Gilmour declared that points of interest of the MARS configuration were sent to NASA and the space office answered back positively. While this specific model won’t be leaving Earth’s climate at any point in the near future, it might be accessible for the general population to view at a space exhibition hall, space explorer preparing office and rocket manufacturing plant that Gilmour is fabricating north of Australia’s Gold Coast.