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Perseveran­ce rover ready to search for life on Mars

Perseveran­ce’s prime mission will last just over two years but it is likely to remain operationa­l well beyond that, with its predecesso­r Curiosity still functionin­g eight years ater landing on the planet

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Ater seven months in space, NASA’S Perseveran­ce rover overcame a tense landing phase with a series of perfectly executed maneuvers to gently float down to the Martian soil Thursday and embark on its mission to search for signs of past life.

“Touchdown confirmed,” said operations lead Swati Mohan at 3:55 pm Eastern Time (2055 GMT), as mission control at NASA’S Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena erupted in cheers.

The autonomous­ly guided procedure was in fact completed more than 11 minutes earlier, the length of time it took for radio signals to return to Earth.

Shortly ater landing, the rover sent back its first black-and-white images, revealing a rocky field at the landing site in the Jezero Crater, just north of the Red Planet’s equator.

More images, video of the descent and perhaps the first sounds of Mars ever recorded by microphone­s are expected in the coming hours as the rover relays data to overhead satellites.

US President Joe Biden hailed the “historic” event.

“Today proved once again that with the power of science and American ingenuity, nothing is beyond the realm of possibilit­y,” he tweeted.

Perseveran­ce’s prime mission will last just over two years but it is likely to remain operationa­l well beyond that, with its predecesso­r Curiosity still functionin­g eight years ater landing on the planet, said NASA acting administra­tor Steve Jurczyk.

“It’ll be on Mars for its entire life,” he said, adding “these robots tend to be really reliable.”

Over the coming years, Perseveran­ce will attempt to collect 30 rock and soil samples in sealed tubes, to be eventually sent back to Earth sometime in the 2030s for lab analysis.

About the size of an SUV, the crat weighs a ton, is equipped with a seven foot- (two meter-) long robotic arm, has 19 cameras, two microphone­s and a suite of cuting-edge instrument­s to assist in its scientific goals.

Before it could set out on its loty quest, it first had to overcome the dreaded “seven minutes of terror” -- the risky entry, descent and landing phase that has scuppered nearly half of all missions to Mars.

The spacecrat carrying Perseveran­ce careened into the Martian atmosphere at 12,500 miles (20,000 kilometers) per hour, protected by its heat shield, then deployed a supersonic parachute the size of a Litle League field, before firing up an eight-engined jetpack.

Finally, it lowered the rover carefully to the ground on a set of cables.

Allen Chen, lead engineer for the landing stage, said a new guidance system called “Terrain Relative Navigation,” which uses a special camera to identify surface features and compare them to an onboard map, was key to landing in a rugged region of scientific interest.

“We are in a nice flat spot, the vehicle is only tilted by about 1.2 degrees,” he said. “We did successful­ly find that parking lot, and have a safe rover on the ground.”

Scientists believe that around 3.5 billion years ago the crater was home to a river that flowed into a deep lake, depositing sediment in a fan-shaped delta.

Perseveran­ce ended up landing about two kilometers (a mile) southeast of the delta, NASA scientist Ken Farley said, in a geological­ly significan­t area.

Mars was warmer and weter in its distant past, and while previous exploratio­n has determined the planet was habitable, Perseveran­ce is tasked with determinin­g whether it was actually inhabited.

It will begin drilling its first samples in summer, and along the way it will deploy new instrument­s to scan for organic mater, map chemical compositio­n and zap rocks with a laser to study the vapor.

Despite the rover’s state-of-the-art technology, bringing samples back to Earth remains crucial because of anticipate­d ambiguitie­s in the specimens it documents.

For example, fossils that arose from ancient microbes may look suspicious­ly similar to patterns caused by precipitat­ion.

Before geting to the main mission, NASA wants to run several eye-catching experiment­s.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? This NASA photo shows the first images ↑ from Perseveran­ce rover as it landed on the surface of Mars.
Agence France-presse This NASA photo shows the first images ↑ from Perseveran­ce rover as it landed on the surface of Mars.

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