Mars Rover Perseverance From NASA Attempting Most Difficult Touchdown Yet

NASA has nailed eight of nine landing attempts, making the US the only country to achieve a successful touchdown.

Advertisement
By Associated Press | Updated: 18 February 2021 11:44 IST
Highlights
  • NASA is attempting its hardest Martian touchdown yet
  • NASA has nailed eight of nine landing attempts
  • The landing team will be spread over multiple rooms

NASA has equipped the 1-ton Perseverance with the latest landing tech to ace this touchdown

Photo Credit: Twitter/ @NASAPersevere

Spacecraft aiming to land on Mars have skipped past the planet, burned up on entry, smashed into the surface, and made it down amid a fierce dust storm only to spit out a single fuzzy gray picture before dying.

Almost 50 years after the first casualty at Mars, NASA is attempting its hardest Martian touchdown yet.

The rover named Perseverance is headed Thursday for a compact 5-mile-by-4-mile (8-kilometre-by-6.4-kilometre) patch on the edge of an ancient river delta. It's filled with cliffs, pits, sand dunes, and fields of rocks, any of which could doom the $3 billion (roughly Rs. 21,800 crores) mission. The once submerged terrain also could hold evidence of past life, all the more reason to gather samples at this spot for return to Earth 10 years from now.

Advertisement

While NASA has done everything possible to ensure success, “there's always this fear that it won't work well, it won't go well,” Erisa Stilley, a landing team engineer, said Tuesday. “We've had a pretty good run of successful missions recently and you never want to be the next one that isn't. It's heartbreaking when it happens.”

A look at NASA's latest mission:

Mars master

NASA has nailed eight of nine landing attempts, making the US the only country to achieve a successful touchdown. China hopes to become the second nation in late spring with its own life-seeking rover; its vessel entered orbit around Mars last week along with a United Arab Emirates spacecraft. The red planet's extremely thin atmosphere makes it hard to get down safely. Russia has piled up the most lander losses at Mars and moon Phobos, beginning in the early 1970s. The European Space Agency also has tried and failed. Two NASA landers are still humming along: 2012′s Curiosity rover and 2018′s InSight. Launched last July, Perseverance will set down some 2,000 miles (3,200 kilometres) away at Jezero Crater, descending by parachute, rocket engines, and sky crane. The millions of lines of software code and hundreds of thousands of electric parts have to work with precision. “There's no go-backs. There's no retries," deputy project manager Matt Wallace said Wednesday.

Advertisement

Toughest landing yet

NASA has equipped the 1-ton Perseverance — a beefier version of Curiosity — with the latest landing tech to ace this touchdown. A new autopilot tool will calculate the descending rover's distance to the targeted location and release the massive parachute at the precise moment. Then another system will scan the surface, comparing observations with on-board maps. The rover could detour up to 2,000 feet (600 meters) while seeking somewhere safe, Neil Armstrong style. Without these gizmos, Jezero Crater would be too risky to attempt. Once down, the six-wheeled Perseverance should be the best driver Mars has ever seen, with more autonomy and range than Curiosity. “Percy's got a new set of kicks," explained chief engineer Adam Steltzner, "and she is ready for trouble on this Martian surface with her new wheels.”

Advertisement

Looking for signs of life

Where there was water, there may have been life. That's why NASA wants Perseverance snooping around Jezero Crater, once home to a lake fed by a river. It's now bone dry, but 3.5 billion years ago, this Martian lake was as big and wet as Nevada and California's Lake Tahoe. Perseverance will shoot lasers at rocks judged most likely to contain evidence of past microscopic life, analysing the emitted vapour, and drill into the best candidates. A few dozen core samples — about a pound's worth (one-half kilogram) of rock and dust — will be set aside in sealed titanium tubes for future pickup.

Advertisement

Round-trip ticket

Scientists have wanted to get hold of Mars rocks ever since NASA's Mariners provided the first close pictures a half-century ago. NASA is teaming up with the European Space Agency to do just that. The bold plan calls for a rover and return rocket to launch to Mars in 2026, to retrieve Perseverance's stash of samples. NASA expects to bring back the rocks as early as 2031, several years before the first astronauts might arrive on the scene. The rover's super sterilised sample tubes are the cleanest components ever sent into space, according to NASA, to avoid any contaminating traces of Earth.

COVID-19 precautions

Speaking of clean, NASA's Mars Mission Control has never been so spotless. Instead of passing around jars of peanuts right before Perseverance's landing — a good luck tradition going back decades — masked flight controllers will get their own individual bags. It's one of many COVID-19 precautions at California's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The landing team will be spread over multiple rooms, with NASA bigwigs and journalists watching remotely. Launched last July, the aptly named Perseverance bears a plaque honoring health care workers battling the virus over the past year.


Is Samsung Galaxy S21+ the perfect flagship for most Indians? We discussed this on Orbital, our weekly technology podcast, which you can subscribe to via Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or RSS, download the episode, or just hit the play button below.

Affiliate links may be automatically generated - see our ethics statement for details.
 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Further reading: NASA, Perseverance, Earth
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. iQOO 15 Confirmed to Launch With This Useful Charging Upgrade
  2. Motorola Edge 70 5G Price Leaked Ahead of Global Launch
  3. Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 Review: The No-Nonsense Smartwatch
  4. Realme 15x 5G With 7,000mAh Battery Launched in India: See Price
  5. Vivo V60e Will Launch in India on This Date
  6. Realme 15 Pro 5G Game of Thrones Edition Will Launch on This Date
  7. Apple's Next iPad Pro Spotted in Unboxing Video; Design, Features Leaked
  1. James Webb Offers First Glimpse Into How Moons Are Built Around Distant Planets
  2. James Webb Telescope Unveils Hidden Star-Forming Regions in Sagittarius B2
  3. Orionid Meteor Shower 2025: When and How to Watch Stunning Shooting Stars
  4. Million Dollar Listing: India Season 2 Streaming Now on OTT: Know When and Where to Watch it Online.
  5. Dill Bill is Now Streaming Online: Know Everything About its Cast, Story, Release Date, and More
  6. Little Hearts (2025) Telugu OTT Release: What You Need to Know about its Cast, Plot, Trailer, and More
  7. JWST Delivers First-Ever Weather Report of Rogue Brown Dwarf World Glowing With Auroras
  8. Made In India: A Titan Story OTT Release Date: Know When and Where to Watch it Online
  9. Halo Studios to Host a "Deep Dive" on Halo Games in Development This Month
  10. Tata Communications Partners BSNL to Offer eSIM Services Across India
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.