Glasgow Times

Nasa craft blasts off in search of life on Mars

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NASA’S new car-sized robotic spacecraft is on its way to Mars in a mission to search for evidence of ancient life. The Perseveran­ce rover successful­ly blasted from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida yesterday at 12.50pm UK time, aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket.

It is the third mission heading to the Red Planet this month after launches by the UAE and China.

Perseveran­ce will travel

314 million miles over a period of nearly seven months before attempting to land on a 31-mile crater named Jezero. Landing on Mars is notoriousl­y difficult because of its thin and dynamic atmosphere. It been described as “seven minutes of terror”.

Nasa has succeeded in getting a only handful of functionin­g probes and rovers on to the Martian surface and more than half of the spacecraft sent there have either blown up, burned up or crashed into the surface.

Satellite images suggest Jezero, located on the western edge of

Isidis Planitia – a giant impact basin just north of the Martian equator, might have been a lake more than 3.5 billion years ago, when Mars was warmer and wetter.

Scientists believe evidence of past life could be preserved in the clay and muddy rocks in the crater, if it ever existed on the planet.

Along with several sophistica­ted instrument­s that will gather informatio­n about Mars’ geology, atmosphere, and environmen­tal conditions, the rover is also carrying a small 1.8kg helicopter.

Called Ingenuity, the copter will fly short distances and will mark the first attempt at powered, controlled flight on another planet.

If successful, it could lead to more flying probes on other planets.

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