The Mercury News

Craft-store fabric will help us land on Mars

- Hau Chu

Imagine your body floating weightless­ly through space. A slight push and pull would allow you to easily change speed and direction.

Now, imagine having to send a 7,300-pound spacecraft racing through Mars’s atmosphere at 12,000 miles per hour. How would you safely land it on the Red Planet?

It turns out, with a lot of trial and error involving basic materials, such as nylon, that you can find in a fabric store.

“A lot of the times when we fail our parachutes (during testing), they failed spectacula­rly. I mean, it’s like you’re creating a confetti machine of nylon,” said Ian Clark, a NASA investigat­or in charge of testing Martian conditions.

“Most of the material of the parachute is kind of very thin stuff — it’s very lightweigh­t nylon — not too dissimilar from what your camping tent is made out of, but actually somewhat lighter than even that. You know, the stuff that you could almost go into a JoAnn Fabrics and buy in rolls.”

Clark’s team is part of the Advanced Supersonic Parachute Inflation Research Experiment, ASPIRE, a project within NASA’s Mars 2020 mission to search for evidence of ancient life on Mars and store it for later return to Earth.

The main goal of ASPIRE is to make sure the rover is able to successful­ly land on the Martian surface. The Curiosity rover that NASA landed on Mars in 2012 weighed less than the 2020 rover, so the team has to account for the heavier vehicle. The key improvemen­t to the upcoming mission is ensuring the nylon on the parachute is stronger and lighter.

Rocket and jet propulsion carries the rover most of the way, but the final drift onto the surface requires a parachute to cut through the challengin­g atmosphere of Mars.

One challenge with testing a parachute on Earth is that the speed of sound here is faster than on our neighborin­g planet. Sound causes drag, or resistance, on objects in flight. And scientists don’t have a way to slow down sound.

“At Mars, it’s about (705 to 720 feet) per second. And at Earth, it’s about (1,082 feet) per second — so it’s almost 50 percent faster at Earth,” Clark said.

So what does that mean when the parachute is tested? “It means it’s probably going to actually inflate faster at Earth than it would at Mars, and it could be more stressing,” he said. “But not so (much) more stressing that we think it’s not a good test to do anyway.”

 ?? COURTESY NASA-JPL-CALTECH ?? A lot of the material used for Mars rover parachutes, like this one being tested for the Mars 2012 rover, is similar to fabric you can buy in a fabric store.
COURTESY NASA-JPL-CALTECH A lot of the material used for Mars rover parachutes, like this one being tested for the Mars 2012 rover, is similar to fabric you can buy in a fabric store.

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