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		Mars rover sends home movie of daredevil descent to landing on red 
		planet
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		 [February 23, 2021] 
		By Steve Gorman 
 LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - NASA scientists on 
		Monday unveiled first-of-a-kind home movies of last week's' daredevil 
		Mars rover landing, vividly showing its supersonic parachute inflation 
		over the red planet and a rocket-powered hovercraft lowering the science 
		lab on wheels to the surface.
 
 The footage was recorded on Thursday by a series of cameras mounted at 
		different angles of the multi-stage spacecraft as it carried the rover, 
		named Perseverance, through the thin Martian atmosphere to a gentle 
		touchdown inside a vast basin called Jezero Crater.
 
 Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA associate administrator for science, called 
		seeing the footage "the closest you can get to landing on Mars without 
		putting on a pressure suit."
 
 The video montage was played for reporters tuning in to a news briefing 
		webcast from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) near Los Angeles 
		four days after the historic landing of the most advanced astrobiology 
		probe ever sent to another world.
 
		
		 
		
 NASA also presented a brief audio clip captured by microphones on the 
		rover after its arrival that included the murmur of a light wind gust - 
		the first ever recorded on the fourth planet from the sun.
 
 JPL imaging scientist Justin Maki said NASA's stationary landing craft 
		InSight, which arrived on Mars in 2018 to study its deep interior, 
		previously measured seismic signals on the planet that were 
		"acoustically driven" and then "rendered as audio."
 
 But mission deputy project manager Matt Wallace said he believed the 
		Martian breeze represented the first ambient sound directly recorded on 
		the surface of Mars and played back for humans.
 
 The spacecraft's mics failed to collect useable audio during descent to 
		the crater floor. But they did pick up a mechanical whirring from the 
		rover after its arrival. Wallace said he hoped to record other sounds, 
		such as the rover's wheels crunching over the surface and its robotic 
		arm drilling for samples of Martian rock.
 
 'THE STUFF OF OUR DREAMS'
 
 But it was film footage from the spacecraft's perilous, self-guided ride 
		through Martian skies to touchdown - an interval NASA has dubbed "the 
		seven minutes of terror" - that JPL's team found particularly striking.
 
 "These videos, and these images are the stuff of our dreams," Al Chen, 
		head of the descent and landing team, told reporters. JPL Director Mike 
		Watkins said engineers spent much of the weekend "binge-watching" the 
		footage.
 
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			The surface of Mars directly below NASA's Mars Perseverance rover is 
			seen using the Rover Down-Look Camera in an image acquired February 
			22, 2021. NASA/JPL-Caltech/Handout via REUTERS 
            
			 
            The video, filmed in color at 75 frames a second, shows action in 
			fluid, vivid motion from several angles, the first such imagery ever 
			recorded of a spacecraft landing on another planet, Wallace said. 
            One of the most dramatic moments is of the red-and-white parachute 
			being shot from a canon-like launch device into the sky above the 
			rover as the spacecraft is hurtling toward the ground at nearly two 
			times the speed of sound.
 The chute springs upward, unfurls and fully inflates in less than 
			two seconds, with no evidence of tangling within its 2 miles (3.2 
			km) of tether lines, Chen said.
 
 A downward-pointing camera shows the heat shield falling away and a 
			sweeping vista of the butterscotch-colored Martian terrain, 
			appearing to shift back and forth as the spacecraft sways under the 
			parachute.
 
 Seconds later, an upward-pointed camera captures the rocket-powered 
			"sky-crane" vehicle, newly jettisoned from the parachute, its 
			thrusters firing but the propellant plumes invisible to the human 
			eye while lowering the rover to a safe landing spot on a harness of 
			tethers.
 
 A separate camera shows the lowering of the six-wheeled rover from 
			the vantage point of the sky crane, looking downward as Perseverance 
			dangles from its cable harness just over the surface with streams of 
			dust billowing around it at touchdown. The sky crane is then seen 
			flying up and away from the landing site after the harness cables 
			are cut.
 
 A single still photo of the rover suspended from the sky crane 
			moments before landing was released by NASA on Friday amid much 
			fanfare as a precursor to the video shown on Monday.
 
            
			 
			The only previous moving footage produced of a spacecraft during a 
			Mars landing was a comparatively crude video shot from beneath the 
			previous rover, Curiosity, during its descent to the planet's 
			surface in 2012. That stop-motion-like sequence was shot at 3.5 
			frames per second from a single angle that showed the ground 
			gradually getting closer but included no images of the parachute or 
			sky-crane maneuvers.
 (Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Peter Cooney)
 
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