The Jerusalem Post

Mars rover Perseveran­ce takes first spin on surface of red planet

Robot gets ready for longer journeys to search for traces of fossilized microbial life

- • By STEVE GORMAN

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – NASA’s Mars rover Perseveran­ce has taken its first, short drive on the surface of the red planet, two weeks after the robot science lab’s picture-perfect touchdown on the floor of a massive crater, mission managers said on Friday.

The six-wheeled, car-sized astrobiolo­gy probe put a total of 6.5 m. on its odometer on Thursday during a half-hour test spin within Jezero Crater, site of an ancient, long-vanished lake bed and river delta on Mars.

Taking directions from mission managers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) near Los Angeles, the rover rolled 4 m. forward, turned about 150 degrees to its left and then drove backward another 2.5 m.

“It went incredibly well,” Anais Zarifian, a JPL mobility test engineer for Perseveran­ce, said during a teleconfer­ence briefing with reporters, calling it a “huge milestone” for the mission.

NASA displayed a photo taken by the rover showing the wheel tread marks left in the reddish, sandy Martian soil after its first drive.

Another vivid image of the surroundin­g landscape shows a rugged, ruddy terrain littered with large, dark boulders in the foreground and a tall outcroppin­g of rocky, layered deposits in the distance – marking the edge of the river delta.

Perseveran­ce is capable of averaging 200 m. of driving per day.

But JPL engineers still have additional equipment checks to run on the rover’s many instrument­s before they will be ready to send the robot on a more ambitious journey as part of its primary mission to search for traces of fossilized microbial life.

So far, Perseveran­ce and its hardware, including its main robot arm, appear to be operating flawlessly, said Robert Hogg, deputy mission manager. The team has yet to conduct post-landing tests of the rover’s sophistica­ted system to drill and collect rock samples for return to Earth via future Mars missions.

NASA announced it has named the site of Perseveran­ce’s February 18 touchdown as the “Octavia E. Butler Landing,” in honor of the award-winning American science-fiction writer. Butler, a native of Pasadena, California, died in 2006 at age 58.

 ?? (NASA/JPL-Caltech via Reuters) ?? WHEEL TREAD marks are left in the soil of Jezero Crater on Mars, as NASA’s Mars rover Perseveran­ce drives on Martian surface for the first time on Thursday.
(NASA/JPL-Caltech via Reuters) WHEEL TREAD marks are left in the soil of Jezero Crater on Mars, as NASA’s Mars rover Perseveran­ce drives on Martian surface for the first time on Thursday.

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