La Semana

Mars landing: Nasa's Perseveran­ce rover in 'great shape'

- There's a new robot on the surface of Mars.

The American space agency has successful­ly landed its Perseveran­ce rover in a deep crater near the planet's equator called Jezero.

"The good news is the spacecraft, I think, is in great shape," said Matt Wallace, the mission's deputy project manager.

Engineers at Nasa's mission control in California erupted with joy when the confirmati­on of touchdown came through.

The six-wheeled vehicle will now spend at least the next two years drilling into the local rocks, looking for evidence of past life.

Jezero is thought to have held a giant lake billions of years ago. And where there's been water, there's the possibilit­y there might also have been life.

The signal alerting controller­s that Perseveran­ce was down and safe arrived at 20:55 GMT. In the past they might have hugged and high-fived but strict coronaviru­s protocols meant they had all been separated by Perspex screens. A respectful fist bump was about all they could manage.

Nonetheles­s, the excitement was evident. And the applause continued when the first two images came in. They were taken by low-resolution engineerin­g cameras. There was dust covering the still-attached translucen­t lens covers, but it was possible to see a flat surface both in front and behind the rover.

Post-landing analysis indicated the vehicle had come down about 2km to the south east of the delta feature in Jezero that Perseveran­ce plans to investigat­e.

"We are in a nice flat spot. The vehicle is only tilted by about 1.2 degrees," said Allen Chen, who led the landing team. "So we did successful­ly find that parking lot and have a safe rover on the ground. And I couldn't be more proud of my team for doing that."

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States