Roger Wiens and his older brother, Doug, spent part of the summer of 1971 building a telescope from scratch to observe the close approach of Mars.
The two brothers from the small southwest Minnesota town of Mountain Lake had been assembling rockets and gazing at the stars for years, but the telescope was a new challenge. They bought supplies using money earned on their paper route and, absent a proper stand, mounted their contraption on a fence post.
Almost 50 years later, Roger Wiens is still helping build objects for space exploration. But his latest creation won't be looking up at Mars; it's attached to a rover rolling across the Red Planet's surface.
Wiens is the principal investigator of the SuperCam instrument mounted on NASA's Perseverance rover, which landed on Mars at 2:55 p.m. Thursday.
"I never really thought that I would still be doing things like building instruments to use on Mars," Wiens said earlier this week.
The SuperCam is an updated and improved version of the ChemCam — of which Wiens was also the principal investigator — that was attached to the Curiosity rover that landed on Mars in 2012.
Mainly situated on the head of the rover, SuperCam uses different types of lasers to capture the color spectrum, mineral structure and atomic composition of rocks and soil on Mars. It also has a camera and a microphone.
"All of these different techniques contribute to us really characterizing the geology," Wiens said. "We think of SuperCam as a geological observatory."