NASA rover faces 'seven minutes of terror' before landing on Mars
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[February 16, 2021]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - When NASA's Mars
rover Perseverance, a robotic astrobiology lab packed inside a space
capsule, hits the final stretch of its seven-month journey from Earth
this week, it is set to emit a radio alert as it streaks into the thin
Martian atmosphere.
By the time that signal reaches mission managers some 127 million miles
(204 million km) away at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) near Los
Angeles, Perseverance will already have landed on the Red Planet -
hopefully in one piece.
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 11-minute-plus radio transmission to Earth. Thus, Thursday's
final, self-guided descent of the rover spacecraft is set to occur
during a white-knuckled interval that JPL engineers affectionately refer
to as the "seven minutes of terror."
Al Chen, head of the JPL descent and landing team, called it the most
critical and most dangerous part of the $2.7 billion mission.
"Success is never assured," Chen told a recent news briefing. "And
that's especially true when we're trying to land the biggest, heaviest
and most complicated rover we've ever built to the most dangerous site
we've ever attempted to land at."
Much is riding on the outcome. Building on discoveries of nearly 20 U.S.
outings to Mars dating back to Mariner 4's 1965 flyby, Perseverance may
set the stage for scientists to conclusively show whether life has
existed beyond Earth, while paving the way for eventual human missions
to the fourth planet from the sun. A safe landing, as always, comes
first.
Success will hinge on a complex sequence of events unfolding without a
hitch - from inflation of a giant, supersonic parachute to deployment of
a jet-powered "sky crane" that will descend to a safe landing spot and
hover above the surface while lowering the rover to the ground on a
tether.
"Perseverance has to do this all on her own," Chen said. "We can't help
it during this period."
If all goes as planned, NASA's team would receive a follow-up radio
signal shortly before 1 p.m. Pacific time confirming that Perseverance
landed on Martian soil at the edge of an ancient, long-vanished river
delta and lake bed.
SCIENCE ON THE SURFACE
From there, the nuclear battery-powered rover, roughly the size of a
small SUV, will embark on the primary objective of its two-year mission
- engaging a complex suite of instruments in the search for signs of
microbial life that may have flourished on Mars billions of years ago.
Advanced power tools will drill samples from Martian rock and seal them
into cigar-sized tubes for eventual return to Earth for further analysis
- the first such specimens ever collected by humankind from the surface
of another planet.
Two future missions to retrieve those samples and fly them back to Earth
are in the planning stages by NASA, in collaboration with the European
Space Agency.
Perseverance, the fifth and by far most sophisticated rover vehicle NASA
has sent to Mars since Sojourner in 1997, also incorporates several
pioneering features not directly related to astrobiology.
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Scientists leading NASA’s exploration of Mars are anticipating
"seven minutes of terror." That’s the time it will take for the Mars
rover named Perseverance to touch down on the red planet later this
week. Gavino Garay reports.
Among them is a small drone helicopter, nicknamed Ingenuity, that
will test surface-to-surface powered flight on another world for the
first time. If successful, the four-pound (1.8-kg) whirlybird could
pave the way for low-altitude aerial surveillance of Mars during
later missions.
Another experiment is a device to extract pure oxygen from carbon
dioxide in the Martian atmosphere, a tool that could prove
invaluable for future human life support on Mars and for producing
rocket propellant to fly astronauts home.
'SPECTACULAR' BUT TREACHEROUS
The mission's first hurdle after a 293-million-mile (472-million-km)
flight from Earth is delivering the rover intact to the floor of
Jerezo Crater, a 28-mile-wide (45-km-wide) expanse that scientists
believe may harbor a rich trove of fossilized microorganisms.
"It is a spectacular landing site," project scientist Ken Farley
told reporters on a teleconference.
What makes the crater's rugged terrain - deeply carved by
long-vanished flows of liquid water - so tantalizing as a research
site also makes it treacherous as a landing zone.
The descent sequence, an upgrade from NASA's last rover mission in
2012, begins as Perseverance, encased in a protective shell, pierces
the Martian atmosphere at 12,000 miles per hour (19,300 km per
hour), nearly 16 times the speed of sound on Earth.
After a parachute deployment to slow its plunge, the descent
capsule's heat shield is set to fall away to release a jet-propelled
"sky crane" hovercraft with the rover attached to its belly.
Once the parachute is jettisoned, the sky crane's jet thrusters are
set to immediately fire, slowing its descent to walking speed as it
nears the crater floor and self-navigates to a smooth landing site,
steering clear of boulders, cliffs and sand dunes.
Hovering over the surface, the sky crane is due to lower
Perseverance on nylon tethers, sever the chords when the rover's
wheels reach the surface, then fly off to crash a safe distance
away.
Should everything work, deputy project manager Matthew Wallace said,
post-landing exuberance would be on full display at JPL despite
COVID-19 safety protocols that have kept close contacts within
mission control to a minimum.
"I don't think COVID is going to be able to stop us from jumping up
and down and fist-bumping," Wallace said.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Frank McGurty
and Will Dunham)
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