Nasa’s 2 mini choppers to bring back Mars rocks
Nasa is launching two more mini helicopters to Mars in its effort to return Martian rocks and soil samples to Earth.
Under the plan announced on Wednesday, Nasa’s Perseverance rover will do double duty and transport the cache to the rocket that will launch them off the red planet a decade from now.
Perseverance already has gathered 11 samples with more rock drilling planned. The most recent sample, a sedimentary rock, holds the greatest promise of containing possible evidence of ancient Martian life, said Arizona State University’s Meenakshi Wadhwa, chief scientist for the retrieval effort.
There’s “a diversity of materials already in the bag, so to speak, and really excited about the potential for bringing these back”, she said.
If Perseverance breaks down, the two helicopters being built and launched later this decade would load the samples onto the rocket instead.
The helicopters will be modelled after Nasa’s successful Ingenuity, which has made 29 flights since arriving with Perseverance at Mars early last year. The chopper weighs just 1.8 kilogrammes. The new versions would have wheels and grappling arms.
Nasa officials said Perseverance’s impressive performance at Mars prompted them to ditch their plan to launch a separate fetch rover.
Jeff Gramling, director of Nasa’s Mars sample return programme, said the revised path forward is simpler. Each helicopter will be designed to lift one sample tube at a time, making multiple trips back and forth. “We have confidence that we can count on Perseverance to bring the samples back and we’ve added the helicopters as a backup means,” Gramling said.
ISS pull-out unlikely soon, Russia tells Nasa
Russian space officials have informed US counterparts that Moscow would like to keep flying its cosmonauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) until their own orbital outpost is built and operational, a senior Nasa official told Reuters on Wednesday.
Taken together with remarks from a senior Russian space official published on Wednesday, the latest indications are that Russia is still at least six years away from ending the collaboration.
The space station, a science laboratory spanning the size of a football field and orbiting some 400km above Earth, has been continuously occupied for more than two decades under a US-Russian-led partnership that also includes Canada, Japan and 11 European countries.