By: AP | Cape Canaveral (florida) |
Updated: March 6, 2021 8:50:08 am
NASA’s latest Mars rover hit the dusty purple street this week, placing 21 ft on the odometer in its first take a look at drive.
The Perseverance rover ventured from its touchdown place Thursday, two weeks after setting down on the purple planet to hunt indicators of previous life.
The roundabout, forwards and backwards drive lasted simply 33 minutes and went so nicely that extra driving was on faucet Friday and Saturday for the the six-wheeled rover.
“This is really the start of our journey here,” stated Rich Rieber, the NASA engineer who plotted the route. “This is going to be like the Odyssey, adventures along the way, hopefully no Cyclops, and I’m sure there will be stories aplenty written about it.”
In its first drive, Perseverance went ahead 13 ft (4 meters), took a 150-degree left flip, then backed up 8 ft (2.5 meters). During a information convention Friday, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, shared photographs of its tracks over and round small rocks.
“I don’t think I’ve ever been happier to see wheel tracks and I’ve seen a lot of them,” stated engineer Anais Zarifian.
Flight controllers are nonetheless checking all of Perseverance’s programs. So far, the whole lot is trying good. The rover’s 7-foot (2-meter) robotic arm, as an example, flexed its muscle tissues for the primary time Tuesday.
Before the car-size rover can head for an historical river delta to gather rocks for eventual return to Earth, it should drop its so-called protecting “belly pan” and launch an experimental helicopter named Ingenuity.
As it seems, Perseverance landed proper on the sting of a possible helicopter touchdown strip — a pleasant, flat spot, based on Rieber. So the plan is to drive out of this touchdown strip, ditch the pan, then return for Ingenuity’s extremely anticipated take a look at flight. All this must be completed by late spring.
Scientists are debating whether or not to take the smoother path to get to the close by delta or a probably harder approach with intriguing remnants from that once-watery time 3 billion to 4 billion years in the past.
Perseverance — NASA’s largest and most elaborate rover but — turned the ninth U.S. spacecraft to efficiently land on Mars on Feb. 18. China hopes to land its smaller rover — presently orbiting the purple planet — in one other few months.
NASA scientists, in the meantime, introduced Friday that they’ve named Perseverance’s landing website in honor of the late science fiction author Octavia E. Butler, who grew up subsequent door to JPL in Pasadena. She was one of many first African Americans to obtain mainstream consideration for science fiction. Her works included “Bloodchild and Other Stories” and “Parable of the Sower.”