San Diego Union-Tribune

NASA FLIES COPTER ON MARS FOR FIRST POWERED FLIGHT ON ANOTHER PLANET

Ingenuity’s achievemen­t likened to 1903 airplane flown by Wright brothers

- BY KENNETH CHANG

A small robotic helicopter named Ingenuity made space exploratio­n history Monday when it lifted off the surface of Mars and hovered in the wispy air of the red planet. It was the first machine from Earth ever to fly like an airplane or a helicopter on another world.

The achievemen­t extends NASA’s long, exceptiona­l record of firsts on Mars.

“We together flew at Mars,” MiMi Aung, the project manager for Ingenuity, said to her team during the celebratio­n. “And we together now have this Wright brothers moment.”

Like the first flight of an airplane by Wilbur and Orville Wright in 1903, the flight did not go far or last long, but it showed what could be done. Flying in the thin atmosphere of Mars was a particular­ly tricky technical endeavor, on the edge of impossible because there is almost no air to push against. NASA engineers employed ultralight materials, fast-spinning blades and highpowere­d computer processing to get Ingenuity off the ground and keep it from veering off and crashing.

And just as the Wright plane led to a transforma­tion in how people and goods zip around Earth, Ingenuity offers a new mode of transporta­tion that NASA can now use as it studies the solar system’s mysteries.

“What the Ingenuity team has done is given us the third dimension,” said Michael Watkins, the director of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory where the helicopter was built, during a news conference. “They freed us from the surface now and forever in planetary exploratio­n.”

Ingenuity was also something

different for NASA — a highrisk, high-reward project with a modest price tag where failure was an acceptable outcome.

That approach is more similar to that of nimble space companies like SpaceX than large traditiona­l developmen­t programs that work through every possible contingenc­y to build a full-scale machine that has to work the first time.

Ingenuity was thus a small experiment tacked onto NASA’s Mars rover, Perseveran­ce, but it has the potential for a paradigmbr­eaking advance.

Perhaps a more advanced helicopter could serve as a scout for a future rover, identifyin­g intriguing locations for closer study and safe routes for the rover to drive there. Or swarms of helicopter­s could zip up and down cliff faces to examine layers of rock that are too far away or out of view of current spacecraft.

There are no current plans to put a second helicopter on Mars. But Bob Balaram, the chief engineer of Ingenuity, said he and colleagues had begun sketching out designs for a larger Mars helicopter with about 10 times the mass and capable of carrying 10 pounds of science equipment.

“That would be, I think, the good sweet spot for the next-generation design,” Balaram said.

On Sunday, mission controller­s at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena radioed the commands for the test to Perseveran­ce, which landed on Mars in February. Perseveran­ce in turn relayed the commands to Ingenuity, which was sitting 200 feet away on flat terrain that was chosen to serve as the airstrip for a series of five test flights.

At 3:34 a.m. Eastern time — it was the middle of the Martian day, half an hour past noon — the helicopter spun up its rotors as it had been commanded and rose above Jezero crater, into the Martian sky.

At the surface of Mars, the atmosphere is just 1/ 100th as dense as Earth’s, not much for helicopter blades to push against. Thus, to generate enough lift for the 4-pound Ingenuity to rise up, its two rotors, each about 4 feet wide, had to spin in opposite directions at more than 2,500 revolution­s per minute.

It hovered at a height of some 10 feet for about 30 seconds. Then it descended back to the surface.

But at that moment, no one on Earth — including people at NASA — knew what was actually happening. The two spacecraft were not in communicat­ion with Earth during the test, and Ingenuity had to perform all of its actions autonomous­ly.

It was only three hours later that one of NASA’s other Mars spacecraft, the Mars Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter, passed overhead, and Perseveran­ce could relay the test data back to Earth.

Minutes later, engineers analyzed the results that showed a successful flight.

Havard Grip, the engineer who serves as NASA’s chief pilot for Ingenuity, announced as the data arrived that the helicopter had completed “the first powered flight of a powered aircraft on another planet.”

NASA officials said they have named the airstrip where Ingenuity took off and landed Wright Brothers Field. A small piece of fabric from the original Wright airplane was glued to Ingenuity and sent to Mars.

Aung told her team to celebrate the moment. “And then after that, let’s get back to work and more flights,” she said.

With the first trip’s success, up to four more flights could be attempted. The first three, including Monday’s, are designed to test basic abilities of the helicopter. The second, which could occur as soon as Thursday, is to rise to an altitude of 16 feet and then travel horizontal­ly about 50 feet before returning to its original location.

The third flight could fly a distance of 160 feet and then return. Grip said the team had not decided on plans for the final two flights. “What we’re talking about here is going higher, going further, going faster, stretching the capabiliti­es of the helicopter in those ways,” he said.

Aung said she thought Ingenuity would squeeze in the remaining four flights over the next two weeks. She also wanted to push Ingenuity to its limits and for the last flight to travel 600 or 700 meters — or up to 2,300 feet.

“I’m being more cautious here,” Grip responded, a bit hesitantly.

NASA plans to wrap up the tests within 30 Martian days of when Ingenuity was dropped off on April 3 so that Perseveran­ce can commence the main portion of its $2.7 billion mission.

Ingenuity was an $85 million nice-to-have, add-on project, but not a core requiremen­t for the success of Perseveran­ce.

The looser requiremen­ts of a technology demonstrat­ion allowed the engineers to use an almost offthe-shelf Qualcomm processor that was originally developed for cellphones with more computing power than all previous interplane­tary spacecraft combined.

The processor, which was not adapted for the harsh conditions of space, was more susceptibl­e to disruption­s of radiation, but the helicopter needed all of that number-crunching speed to maintain steady flight.

 ?? NASA VIA AP ?? NASA’s experiment­al Mars helicopter Ingenuity lands on the surface of Mars on Monday. The 4-pound helicopter rose from the dusty red surface into the thin Martian air, achieving the first powered, controlled flight on another planet.
NASA VIA AP NASA’s experiment­al Mars helicopter Ingenuity lands on the surface of Mars on Monday. The 4-pound helicopter rose from the dusty red surface into the thin Martian air, achieving the first powered, controlled flight on another planet.

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