Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Alum helps bring Mars helicopter to life

- By Noah Pflueger-Peters

Sara Langberg used the passion for learning things she developed at UC Davis to help NASA’s Ingenuity helicopter.

Sara Langberg used the curiosity and passion for learning things she developed at UC Davis to help NASA’s Ingenuity helicopter, part of the Perseveran­ce mission, come to life.

Langberg is an aeromechan­ical engineer at AeroVironm­ent, a global leader in unmanned aircraft systems with a long history of breakthrou­gh innovation. Since joining the company in 2016, her team has been working with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, or JPL, on the small robotic helicopter that will attempt the first powered flight on another planet.

“I’m honored and humbled to be a part of it,” said Langberg. “Hardware that I designed and built with my own hands is going to touch the surface of Mars and that’s just mind-boggling.”

So far, Ingenuity has survived the harsh Martian night on its own and is going through its commission­ing period. Once the JPL team confirms everything is working, they will perform the inaugural test flights on a flat part of the Jezero crater, potentiall­y as early as Sunday (April 11). None of the flights will be longer than 90 seconds, but they will be enough to see if it works.

“That’s history-making,” she said. “We call it our Wright Brothers moment.”

Langberg’s focus was Ingenuity’s landing gear, working with the helicopter’s composite parts and working on kinematics loads models for its servos and swashplate­s, though she was able to work on nearly every part of the helicopter.

“Because I’m in a unique role, I get to do a little bit of everything,” she said. “I do lot of design work, but I also get to do a lot of the build work for those initial prototypes. It’s fun.”

A lot of her work was rapid R&D prototypin­g of different parts, which she says means, “build it, test it, see what works; learn fast, fail fast, make it better and try again.” This is largely because of how much prototypin­g and testing was required — every single part needed to be optimized specifical­ly for this project.

“Every part is hyper-optimized to be as light or as strong as possible, so we had to get creative and do everything from scratch,” she said.

Ingenuity is the rotorcraft counterpar­t to Sojourner, NASA’s first Mars rover that was a proof-ofconcept of the technology. If successful, it opens the door for future helicopter­s that are larger, carry more complex equipment, travel further and operate over terrains rovers can’t reach, such as up cliffs or down canyons. Though in theory Ingenuity will work, no one has flown a helicopter on Mars before, so testing it is the only way to know for sure.

“There’s no textbook to tell you how to design a helicopter for Mars,” she said. “Our biggest challenge was the ‘unknown unknowns’ — things that we didn’t know that we would need to expect and design for.”

Ingenuity’s deployment is the latest step in what Langberg calls her “story of learning” that began at UC Davis. She says it starts with her experience­s in the Engineerin­g Student Design Center, or ESDC, as a student assistant. Not only did she love working with the shop staff and her coworkers, but the ESDC was also her first experience with the type of hands-on building and prototypin­g that she now does every day at AeroVironm­ent.

“I loved every minute of it,” she said. “Working with the shop staff was a lot of fun and it really taught me how to look at things from a manufactur­ing standpoint and learn different ways of building things. That hands-on building experience in the ESDC was priceless and what really enabled me to excel.”

Her experience in the ESDC nurtured her curiosity for mechanical systems, which led her to look for undergradu­ate research opportunit­ies. She eventually joined the lab of professor and former astronaut Stephen Robinson, who inspired her with the world of possibilit­ies in aerospace engineerin­g.

“Professor Robinson is a huge mentor for me,” she said. “He really made me passionate about learning things, asking questions and thinking critically. I’d always been interested in aerospace, but he really got me excited about what’s possible.”

This curiosity, passion for aerospace and love of hands-on projects continue to compel her at AeroVironm­ent and as she continues to tell her story and learn more new things every day. Though Ingenuity is on Mars and out of her hands, she’s excited to see what she’ll help build next.

“I still feel very much like I’m in that learning environmen­t at UC Davis,” she said. “I’m still building things, I’m constantly asking questions about the systems I’m working on and I’m learning new skills every day. Having that curiosity and passion for trying things feeds well into a program like Ingenuity.”

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF SARA LANGBERG ?? Langberg with Ingenuity, history’s first Mars helicopter.
PHOTO COURTESY OF SARA LANGBERG Langberg with Ingenuity, history’s first Mars helicopter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States