Orlando Sentinel

PERSEVERAN­CE BEGINS MISSION

Liftoff successful­ly kicks off journey to scout out signs of life on planet

- By Caroline Glenn

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER — America’s Mars Perseveran­ce rover launched Thursday from Cape Canaveral, the start of an 11-year quest to discover if the Red Planet ever harbored life.

Liftoff came right on schedule at 7:50 a.m., just a few minutes after NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in southern California reported feeling minor shakes from a small earthquake. There was a brief issue communicat­ing with the spacecraft after launch, but it was resolved, NASA said.

The $2.7 billion Perseveran­ce mission rode atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Space Launch Complex 41, and if all goes well, the rover will touch down on the Martian surface in February and begin scouting out signs of ancient life.

“For me, that’s what it’s about. That question,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA’s associate administra­tor for the science mission directorat­e. “… A question that for thousands of years philosophe­rs have asked, scientists have asked … and that is, is there life out there?”

Perseveran­ce is one of three spacecraft that launched to Mars this summer. Two others were the Hope Orbiter from the United Arab Emirates and China’s Tianwen-1 lander and rover. They’ll build upon discoverie­s of past missions that found Mars could have once supported life.

The U.S launch had to be delayed three times, and if it didn’t lift off by Aug. 11, the mission would have been postponed until 2022 when there is another window as Earth and Mars align. Delaying it again would have cost NASA about $500 million.

In the lead-up to Thursday’s launch, NASA administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e talked about the new meaning the name of the rover took on once the coronaviru­s began to spread across the nation.

The pandemic threatened to interrupt the launch, but teams

“persevered,” he said, with some working from home during the most critical points of the mission when the rover was going through final testing. The rover itself was cleaned relentless­ly.

“The public wants to see the United States of America and our internatio­nal partners do stunning things, and we have a history of doing amazing things in the most challengin­g times. And this is no different,” Bridenstin­e said.

Perseveran­ce will for the first time gather rock samples that will be brought back for Earthlings to study. For the samples to make it back to Earth, America and Europe have devised a complex and lengthy return mission that will send up a yet-to-be-developed lander, rover, orbiter and small rocket.

The hopeful return date for the samples is 2031. Only then will scientists possibly be able to determine whether anything ever lived on Mars.

As for Alexander Mather, the 13-year-old from Virginia who named the rover in a nationwide contest, he’s a believer.

“I’m not one of those people who believes in superstiti­ous crop circles and stuff, but in my opinion, there’s so much space in the universe there’s no way we’re the only ones,” he said at a Kennedy Space Center news conference this week. “There’s got to be something or someone else out there. Even if it’s just microbes.”

Collecting the samples

Perseveran­ce will land in Mars’ Jezero crater, a 28-mile-wide part of the planet that billions of years ago was home to a now dried-up river that could hold traces of ancient life. Visiting that jagged part of the planet is possible because of a special navigation system that can help the rover avoid dangerous spots.

“We know from other studies, other rovers and orbiters that is a key time in Mars history, when it transition­ed from being a warmer, wetter environmen­t at the surface with nice neutral water to being more acidic waters, and then eventually drying out and rusting and turning red like we see it today,” Chris Herd, a sample return scientist who works at the University of Alberta in Canada, said of the crater.

The rover is loaded with experiment­s, including a small helicopter named Ingenuity that will conduct the first rotorcraft flight on another planet, a modern-day “Wright Brothers moment,” NASA says.

Swatches of spacesuit materials are on board to see how they hold up on Mars, as well as a tool that can turn carbon dioxide into oxygen. Other tools will collect data about the planet’s weather to help predict dangerous dust storms and shoot a groundpene­trating laser to help figure out what kind of landing gear human missions need.

The rover’s main objective will be to drill for samples that contain possible “biosignatu­res” of old life, with enough tubes to hold 43 samples. Going 0.1 mph, it can self-drive 656 feet a day looking and traverse obstacles about a foot high.

To ensure the titanium sample tubes haven’t been contaminat­ed on Earth, NASA’s planetary protection officer Lisa Pratt said they’ve been flame-sterilized and handled in ultra-clean rooms.

The rover will take photos and measuremen­ts of the samples and keep them until NASA determines the best spot to leave them on the surface. And unlike the Mars Curiosity rover that ground up rock samples and left them on Mars, these samples will be mostly whole.

Lori Glaze, director of NASA’s Planetary Science Division, said NASA will be able to preserve the samples for decades, allowing scientists in the future to study them to answer questions “we haven’t even thought of yet.”

Waiting to analyze

In 2026, NASA will launch on a two-year journey a lander to bring the samples back, opting for a different and much longer route than it took for Perseveran­ce to avoid arriving in the middle of winter when storms are prevalent.

But even after NASA lands back on Mars, analyzing the samples left behind won’t be instantane­ous work. It’ll be three years until they make it to Earth, a mission NASA and the European Space Agency will work together on.

David Parker, director of human and robotic exploratio­n for the European Space Agency, said its portion of the return mission will total about 1.5 billion Euros, or about $1.8 billion. NASA estimated its part will cost up to $3 billion.

In 2028, a lander will arrive on the Mars surface and with it a small NASA rocket and a European rover that will collect the sample tubes and take them back to the lander to then be transferre­d into a special container within the rocket.

Then in 2029, the rocket, which is only about 9 feet tall and 2 feet wide, will lift off from the Mars surface.

Meanwhile, a European orbiter also scheduled to launch in 2026 will have made its way to Mars in time for the rocket to toss over the soccer ball-sized container with the samples.

The orbiter will catch it and eventually jettison it toward Earth. Both the orbiter and the fetch rover will be developed by Airbus-France.

NASA expects the samples to land in

Utah no earlier than 2031.

If signs of life are found, NASA officials said they anticipate it would forever transform the way humans see themselves.

“I think there would be no bigger discovery in the history of humanity than finding life that is not on our own world,” Bridenstin­e said.

 ?? JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? The United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket carrying the Perseveran­ce rover launches Thursday from Cape Canaveral. If all goes well, the rover will touch down on the Martian surface in February.
JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL The United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket carrying the Perseveran­ce rover launches Thursday from Cape Canaveral. If all goes well, the rover will touch down on the Martian surface in February.

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