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regular-article-logo Saturday, 16 November 2024

NASA’s Perseverance Rover lands on Mars to renew search for extinct life

Scientific tools being carried by the robotic explorer to bring advanced capabilities to the operation

Kenneth Chang Washington Published 19.02.21, 10:05 AM
Members of NASA's Perseverance Mars rover team watch in mission control at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, on Thursday.

Members of NASA's Perseverance Mars rover team watch in mission control at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, on Thursday. (Bill Ingalls/NYTNS)

NASA safely landed a new robotic rover on Mars on Thursday, beginning its most ambitious effort in decades to directly study whether there was ever life on the now barren red planet.

While the agency has completed other missions to Mars, the $2.7 billion robotic explorer, named Perseverance, carries scientific tools that will bring advanced capabilities to the search for life beyond Earth. The rover, about the size of a car, can use its sophisticated cameras, lasers that can analyze the chemical makeup of Martian rocks and ground-penetrating radar to identify the chemical signatures of fossilized microbial life that may have thrived on Mars when it was a planet full of flowing water.

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“Now the fun really starts,” Lori Glaze, director of NASA’s planetary science division, said during a news conference after the landing.

NASA’s earlier missions showed that in the distant past some places were warm, wet and habitable. Now it is time to learn whether there were ever any microscopic inhabitants there.

“It‘s an enormous undertaking that’s in front of us, and it has enormous scientific potential to really be transformative,” Kenneth Williford, a deputy project scientist on the mission, said during a news conference Wednesday. “The question is, ‘Was Mars ever a living planet?’ ”

Mars has been the focus of more and more interest from explorers on Earth. The United Arab Emirates and China both began orbiting the planet last month, joining an armada of European and American spacecraft already studying it from space. And private entrepreneurs are looking toward the neighboring world, with some such as Elon Musk imagining that one day perhaps humans could live there.

The rover will set in motion a NASA plan that is to be carried out over the next decade — one that could bring samples from Mars back to Earth, where scientists will have even more capabilities to find something signaling that our planet is not the only place where life has ever been found.

The mission will also try to make a small experimental helicopter, Ingenuity, take flight in the thin Martian atmosphere — something never accomplished before. Successful tests of this Marscopter could point the way toward new methods for searching the surface of Mars and other worlds from their skies.

A successful test of the helicopter would be “a true extraterrestrial Wright Brothers moment,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA’s associate administrator for science.

NASA has landed a series of rovers on Mars since the 1990s. Each has revolutionized human understanding of Mars.

The Spirit and Opportunity rovers, which landed in 2004, followed unmistakable signs of water that flowed several billion years ago. The Curiosity rover, which arrived in 2012, quickly discovered that its location, the 96-mile-wide Gale Crater, was once a freshwater lake — an environment that was clearly habitable, although it was not equipped to answer whether microbes once inhabited the lake.

Perseverance, by contrast, has the tools that can search for complex carbon-based molecules that could be the remnants of past microbes.

“We’re looking for lifelike shapes, and lifelike compositions,” Williford said. “Chemical compositions — so the elements, the minerals, the molecules, the organic molecules that we know are associated with life — we’re looking for all those things occurring together.”

The setting for the mission’s studies is Jezero, a 30-mile-wide crater that was once a large lake filled by a river delta. The rover will crawl along the ancient delta, poring over its piles of sediments in search of those chemical signals of microbes that were extinguished as Mars turned cold and barren.

Perseverance was the third robotic visitor from Earth to arrive at the red planet this month. Last week, two other spacecraft, Hope from the United Arab Emirates and Tianwen-1 from China, entered orbit around Mars.

But NASA’s spacecraft did not go into orbit first. Instead it zipped along a direct path to the surface.

At 3:48 p.m. Eastern time, controllers at the mission operations center at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory near Pasadena, California, received word from Perseverance that it had entered the top of the Martian atmosphere at a speed of more than 12,000 mph. The spacecraft was beginning the landing maneuvers that would bring it to a soft stop in just 7 anxiety-drenched minutes.

All that anyone on Earth could do was watch and hope that Perseverance performed as designed.

Mars is currently 126 million miles from Earth. Radio signals, traveling at the speed of light, take more than 11 minutes to travel from there to here. That means that when the message announcing the start of the landing sequence reached Earth, the rover had already been on Mars for 4 minutes. The only uncertainty was whether it had safely arrived in one piece, or had crashed into many pieces, another human-made crater on the planet’s surface.

The atmosphere of NASA’s operations center — more sparsely filled than previous Mars landings because of precautions required by the coronavirus pandemic — was mostly pensively quiet. At 3:55 p.m., cheers erupted in the control room when Perseverance arrived on the surface.

As designed, the landing system set the rover down on a flat spot a bit more than 1 mile to the southeast of the river delta the scientists want to explore, near the boundary between two types of rocks, an area that could tell scientists a lot about the geologic history of the area.

“This is a great place to be,” said Kenneth Farley, the project scientist, said at a news conference after the landing.

The first few weeks will be spent testing out the equipment, turning on the instruments, making the first few short drives. Then NASA will turn its focus to testing its experimental helicopter.

Over the coming weeks, Perseverance will deploy the 4-pound flying machine. If the Ingenuity helicopter works, it will be the first such flight in the atmosphere of another world in the solar system.

With NASA’s rover on the surface, space watchers will soon turn their eyes back toward China’s Tianwen-1 mission. As it orbits Mars, the spacecraft is preparing for a rover landing of its own. In May or June, the mission’s lander and unnamed rover will try to set down in a basin called Utopia Planitia. If it succeeds, that explorer will study the ice composition of the region, potentially helping future astronauts understand what resources are available to them should they set off for the red planet.

New York Times News Service

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