Imperial Valley Press

‘Flawless’: NASA craft lands on Mars after perilous journey

-

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — A NASA spacecraft designed to drill down into Mars’ interior landed on the planet Monday after a perilous, supersonic plunge through its red skies, setting off jubilation among scientists who had waited in white-knuckle suspense for confirmati­on to arrive across 100 million miles of space.

Flight controller­s at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, leapt out of their chairs, screaming, dancing and hugging, upon learning that InSight’s had safely arrived on Mars, the graveyard for a multitude of previous missions.

“Touchdown confirmed!” a flight controller called out, touching off a celebratio­n that was a complete turnaround from the nail-biting anxiety that gripped the control room as the spacecraft made its six-minute descent.

Confirmati­on came minutes later from a pair of tiny satellites that had been trailing InSight throughout the six-month, 300-million-mile (482-million-kilometer) journey.

The two experiment­al satellites not only relayed the good news in almost real time, they sent back InSight’s first snapshot of Mars just 4½ minutes after landing. The picture was speckled with debris because the dust cover was still on the lander’s camera, but the terrain looked smooth and sandy with just one sizable rock visible — pretty much what scientists had hoped for. Better photos are expected in the days ahead.

It was NASA’s — indeed, humanity’s — eighth successful landing at Mars since the 1976 Viking probes, and the first in six years. NASA’s Curiosity rover, which arrived in 2012, is still on the move on Mars.

“Flawless,” declared JPL’s chief engineer, Rob Manning. “This is what we really hoped and imagined in our mind’s eye,” he added. “Sometimes things work out in your favor.”

NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e, presiding over his first Mars landing as the space agency’s boss, said: “What an amazing day for our country.”

He said it was a little strange to realize that by the time word arrived, history had already been made eight minutes earlier because of the lag in communicat­ion between Mars and Earth.

Indeed, by the time word of touchdown came from space just after 3 p.m. EST, InSight was already well settled on the western side of Elysium Planitia, the flatas-a-parking-lot plain that NASA was aiming for.

Many Mars-bound spacecraft launched by the U.S., Russia and other spacefarin­g countries, have been lost or destroyed over the years, with a success rate of just 40 percent, not counting InSight.

NASA went with its old, straightfo­rward approach this time, using a parachute and braking engines to get InSight’s speed from 12,300 mph (19,800 kph) when it pierced the Martian atmosphere, about 77 miles (114 kilometers) up, to 5 mph (8kph) at touchdown.

Flight controller­s were relieved to find out promptly that Insight made it to the surface and didn’t burn up in the atmosphere or bounce off it.

 ??  ?? An engineer smiles next to an image of Mars sent from the InSight lander shortly after it landed on Mars in the mission support area of the space flight operation facility at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory on Monday in Pasadena, Calif. aL sEIb/Los aNgELEs TImEs VIa aP
An engineer smiles next to an image of Mars sent from the InSight lander shortly after it landed on Mars in the mission support area of the space flight operation facility at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory on Monday in Pasadena, Calif. aL sEIb/Los aNgELEs TImEs VIa aP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States