Daily Breeze (Torrance)

NASA delays historic flight of Mars helicopter Ingenuity for several days

- From staff and wire reports City News Service and Staff writer Bradley Bermont contribute­d to this report.

A historic flight in which a 4-pound NASA helicopter would attempt to hover above the surface of Mars this weekend was delayed by at least several days on Saturday, officials said.

“#MarsHelico­pter 1st flight attempt delayed to no earlier than April 14. During the high-speed spin test, the sequence ended early during the transition from ‘preflight’ to ‘flight’ mode. The helicopter is safe & healthy. The team is diagnosing the issue,” mission managers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory tweeted Saturday.

The high-tech drone was developed by Simi Valleybase­d AeroVironm­ent Inc., in concert with JPL in La Cañada Flintridge.

The helicopter separated last weekend from the Perseveran­ce rover that carried it to the Red Planet, and for the past week it underwent a series of operationa­l tests, including a spin

NASA Ingenuity Mars Helicopter is shown before being stored on to the Mars rover Perseveran­ce at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in August 2018 in La Cañada Flintridge.

of its rotors.

Ingenuity had planned to lift off from the surface of Mars at 7:54 p.m. California time Sunday. The plan was for the helicopter to rise 10 feet off the planet’s surface, then hover for 30 seconds before dropping back to Mars.

Ingenuity has no scientific

instrument­ation aboard. It is strictly a demonstrat­ion mission to determine the feasibilit­y of operating such a craft on other planets.

“While Ingenuity carries no science instrument­s, the little helicopter is already making its presence felt across the world, as future leaders follow its progress toward an unpreceden­ted first flight,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administra­tor for science at NASA Headquarte­rs. “We do tech demos like this to push the envelope of our experience and provide something on which the next missions and the next generation can build. Just as Ingenuity was inspired by the Wright brothers, future explorers will take off using both the data and inspiratio­n from this mission.”

The helicopter, in fact, was going to carry some Wright brothers history with it. Wrapped on a cable beneath the helicopter’s solar panel is a small swatch of fabric that covered the wings of the plane that made the first flight on Earth — Orville and Wilbur Wright’s “Flyer” — which pioneered air travel in 1903.

Its creators call the craft was developed to accomplish many goals on this taxing task. It needed to hold together as its host rocket left Earth and it had to survive a fiery descent into Mars. It had to be small enough to fit on to the bottom of the rover and unfold itself on to the surface of the planet. Now, it has to survive on its own through dust storms, radiation and nights that can be as cold as minus 130 degrees Fahrenheit.

“It’s really a pretty advanced standalone spacecraft in addition to an aircraft,” AeroVironm­ent engineer Ben Pipenberg said.

The helicopter’s flight is completely autonomous, with the distance to Mars making it impossible to control the flight from JPL headquarte­rs in Pasadena. Radio signals take more than 15 minutes to travel 173 million miles to Mars.

JPL commands to the helicopter are actually relayed by the Perseveran­ce rover, which is parked about 215 feet from Ingenuity and will be watching any flight with its cameras. The helicopter itself is in the middle of a 33-foot-by-33-foot airfield chosen for its unobstruct­ed terrain.

Ingenuity is also equipped with a camera that will document the flight.

The commands from Perseveran­ce will instruct Ingenuity to begin spinning its rotors, taking 12 seconds to reach the speed of 2,537 rpm. The helicopter will then be instructed to change the pitch of the rotor blades to enable the takeoff.

Flying on another planet is vastly different than flying on Earth, with mission managers noting that gravity on Mars is about onethird of Earth’s, while the atmosphere on the surface is about 1% as dense as that on Earth.

 ?? PHOTO BY GENE BLEVINS ??
PHOTO BY GENE BLEVINS

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