NASA’s rover faces “seven minutes of terror” before landing on Mars

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – When NASA’s Mars Perseverance rover, a robotic astrobiology lab packed inside a space capsule, reaches the final stretch of its seven-month journey from Earth this week, it is scheduled to broadcast a radio alert as it enters the fine Martian atmosphere.

A United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket carrying NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance Rover takes off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Cape Canaveral, Florida, USA on July 30, 2020. REUTERS / Joe Skipper

By the time this signal reaches mission managers about 204 million km (127 million miles) away from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) near Los Angeles, Perseverance will have already landed on the red planet, hopefully.

The six-wheeled rover is expected to take seven minutes to descend from the top of the Martian atmosphere to the planet’s surface in less time than the more than 11-minute radio transmission to Earth. Therefore, Thursday’s final self-guided descent from the Rover spacecraft will occur during a white wedding interval that JPL engineers affectionately call the “seven minutes of terror”.

Al Chen, head of the JPL landing and landing team, called it the most critical and dangerous part of the $ 2.7 billion mission.

“Success is never assured,” Chen said in a recent report. “And that’s especially true when we’re trying to land the biggest, heaviest and trickiest rover we’ve built to the most dangerous place we’ve tried to land.”

It is relying heavily on the result. Based on the discoveries of nearly 20 U.S. trips to Mars dating back to the 1965 Mariner 4 flyby, perseverance can pave the way for scientists to conclusively prove whether life has existed beyond Earth. while preparing the way for eventual human missions to the fourth planet from the sun. . A safe landing, as always, is the first.

Success will depend on a complex sequence of events that unfolds smoothly: from the inflation of a giant, supersonic parachute to the deployment of a lightning-powered “sky crane” that will descend to a landing point. secure and will be placed above the surface as the rover lowers to the ground on a tie.

“Perseverance has to do it all by itself,” Chen said. “We can’t avoid it during this period.”

If all goes as planned, the NASA team would receive a follow-up radio signal shortly before 1 p.m., Pacific time, confirming that perseverance landed on Martian land on the edge of an ancient delta of the Pacific. river and missing lake bed.

SURFACE SCIENCE

From here, the nuclear-powered rover, about the size of a small SUV, will embark on the main goal of its two-year mission: to hire a complex set of instruments in search of signs. of microbial life that may have flourished on Mars billions of years ago.

Advanced power tools will drill samples of Martian rock and seal them in cigarette-sized tubes to eventually return to Earth for analysis, the first such specimens collected by humanity from the surface of another planet.

Two future missions to retrieve these samples and return them to Earth are being planned by NASA, in collaboration with the European Space Agency.

Perseverance, the fifth and most sophisticated rover vehicle that NASA has sent to Mars since Sojourner in 1997, also incorporates several pioneering features that are not directly related to astrobiology.

Among them is a small helicopter with a drone, nicknamed Ingenuity, which will test surface motorized flight in another world for the first time. If successful, the four-pound (1.8 kg) bird could pave the way for low-altitude aerial surveillance of Mars during subsequent missions.

Another experiment is a device to extract pure oxygen from carbon dioxide into the Martian atmosphere, a tool that could be invaluable for future support for human life on Mars and for the production of rocket propellant to fly astronauts to Mars. house.

“SPECTACULAR” FOR T TREQUERA

The first obstacle of the mission after a flight of 472 million km from Earth is delivering the rover intact to the ground of Jerez crater, a 45 km wide extension that scientists believe may house a rich group of fossilized microorganisms .

“It’s a spectacular landing site,” project scientists Ken Farley told reporters by teleconference.

What makes the rugged terrain of the crater, deeply sculpted by the missing liquid water flows, is so seductive as a place of research also makes it treacherous as a landing area.

The descent sequence, an update to NASA’s last rover mission in 2012, begins when Perseverance, embedded in a protective shell, traverses the Martian atmosphere at 19,300 km per hour, almost 16 times the speed of sound on Earth. .

After a parachute deployment to slow its passage, the descent shield’s heat shield is scheduled to fall to release a lightning-powered hovercraft “sky crane” with the rover attached to its belly.

Once the parachute is removed, the propellers of the sky crane are fired to fire immediately, slowing the speed of its descent as it approaches the crater floor and navigates to a soft landing site, moving away. -se of pebbles, cliffs and sand dunes.

Located on the surface, the sky crane is due to a lower perseverance on the nylon ties, breaks the chords when the rover’s wheels reach the surface and then flies to crash at a safe distance.

In case it all worked out, Deputy Project Director Matthew Wallace said the post-landing exuberance would be on full screen at JPL despite COVID-19 security protocols that have maintained close contacts within the control of the mission to a minimum.

“I don’t think COVID can stop us from jumping up and down and up,” Wallace said.

Report by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Edited by Frank McGurty and Will Dunham

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