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Mars NASA Space

NASA Launches New Rover, Perseverance, To Look For Ancient Life on Red Planet (nbcnews.com) 42

NASA is heading back to the Red Planet. The agency launched a new rover, a car-size robotic explorer named Perseverance, to Mars on an ambitious mission to scour the planet for evidence of ancient life. From a report: The rover, which launched into orbit Thursday at 7:50 a.m. ET, is designed to study the geology and climate of Mars. NASA says the mission and its subsequent discoveries could lay the groundwork for eventual human exploration of the Red Planet. Perseverance is loaded with seven scientific instruments to explore the Martian landscape and assess whether the planet was ever able to sustain life. The six-wheel rover is also carrying a small helicopter, dubbed Ingenuity, to perform experimental test flights in Mars' thin atmosphere, which, if successful, would mark a milestone in powered flight.

"For the first time ever, we're going to fly a helicopter on another planet," NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said Monday in a news briefing, adding that future missions to other worlds could use similar helicopters as airborne scouts. The Perseverance rover launched aboard an Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. Typically, crowds gather along beaches near Cape Canaveral to witness NASA launches, but because of the coronavirus pandemic, the agency encouraged space fans to stay home and participate virtually, instead -- particularly as new infections continue to surge in Florida and across the country. Matt Wallace, the mission's deputy project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said the rover has already lived up to its name, as engineers persevered through the pandemic to ready the spacecraft for its much-anticipated launch. "Nothing prepared us for what we had to deal with in the middle of March as the pandemic struck -- not just our team, but communities across the country and the world," Wallace said. "At that point in the mission, we were in our final assembly activities."

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NASA Launches New Rover, Perseverance, To Look For Ancient Life on Red Planet

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  • Good news (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Pascoea ( 968200 ) on Thursday July 30, 2020 @10:30AM (#60347521)
    With all the shitty news going around, it feels pretty good to read stuff like this. Restores a little bit of faith in humanity knowing there are good people out there doing good things.
    • Re:Good news (Score:4, Informative)

      by cusco ( 717999 ) <brian@bixby.gmail@com> on Thursday July 30, 2020 @10:33AM (#60347545)

      Indeed. There are three spacecraft on their way now, including one from the United Arab Republics of all places. I'll be very interested to see how the Chinese do, they seem to be on a turtle-like slow but steady course.

      • I'll be very interested to see how the Chinese do, they seem to be on a turtle-like slow but steady course.

        Yeah, but space is turtles, all the way down, so the Chinese are holding it right.

    • Don't rejoice too fast. The usual basement dwelling never-accomplished-anything-in-their-miserable-worthless-lives anti-science anti-intellectualism anti-NASA trolls are already on the job polluting this thread with their filth.

      Personnaly, I'm glad there are still some people on /. that still have the Curiosity Spirit and still believe humanity should take every Opportunity to explore, discover and learn. ;)

      • Don't rejoice too fast. The usual basement dwelling never-accomplished-anything-in-their-miserable-worthless-lives anti-science anti-intellectualism anti-NASA trolls are already on the job polluting this thread with their filth.

        >

        They already have Slate and Salon to peddle their position on. Why here?

    • Except there isn't any life on Mars. There - I just saved NASA a billion dollars.
      • Re:Good news (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Pascoea ( 968200 ) on Thursday July 30, 2020 @01:28PM (#60348537)
        And you just made me waste 30 seconds to type out a reply to tell you to kindly piss off. They built a robot designed to fly a helicopter on another planet, put it on a big damn rocket, and launched it off Earth. What have you accomplished today?
      • > Except there isn't any life on Mars.

        Regular methane plumes beg to differ.
        Not a definitive indicator but a real strong one.
    • The MOXIE experiment is stunt, a pointless stunt. It displaced real science for a stunt to please the Manned Mission Directorate. This Directorate just cannot help themselves and they are always mucking up real science.

      This idiotic experiment could have been done in any of a hundred college basements....but now the rover has to lug this dead weight all over the surface. If we must have such a pointless experiment, why not do it on a stationary lander.....

  • by dmay34 ( 6770232 ) on Thursday July 30, 2020 @11:30AM (#60347877)
    I wish we would dust off the old Opportunity designs, manufacture a few dozen, and send some more of those all over the planet. Most of the cost in these rovers is in science planning and engineering design, which is already done. We could stuff five of those guys the nose cone of an Atlas V. Spread them all over the planet. Every one of them would make new discoveries every day.
    • I agree. I've often wondered why NASA has never utilized mass production as a way to bring down costs instead of having every new probe or lander be a custom built one-off which is what they currently do. With the decline in launch costs, there's no reason why this couldn't be done. It's an opportunity (pun intended) for mass exploration that has never been done.
      • You hit the key point there. "With the decline in launch costs". The launch cost were so great, you had to get the most bang for your buck from each launch. There was so much time between each one that technology advanced, and you could develop a better probe. With the decline in launch costs, mass exploration may be the way of the future.
      • Because contrary to claims, design isnâ(TM)t the biggest expense for these rovers. And you canâ(TM)t load 5 of them on an Atlas rocket and send them on their way. One of these rovers are close to the limit that an Atlas can get to Mars. And if you think spacex is going to save you money, think again. The Spacex BFR canâ(TM)t carry as much payload as an Atlas 541 in itâ(TM)s reusable configuration. The only way spacex is getting even a single rover to mars is with an expendable bfr.
      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        Because Congress would never fund it. When the purse strings are held by a herd of lawyers who think AOL is the cutting edge of technology you better make every bolt and nut exactly what you need because you're not going to get a chance to send another for a decade or more. Look at Hubble, designed in the 1970s, launched in 1990, still up there doing its job because lawyers don't know that technology has moved in in the past 30 years.

        On the other hand, the military and intel agencies have so much money th

      • NASA has tried, I think at least twice, two make "cookie cutter" probe designs, for lack of a better word. The last go-around was in the 90's and that's when we smashed two probes into Mars pretty close together. While the MCO (Mars Climate Orbiter) crash was famous, because of an imperial vs metric error, another problem was the goofy asymmetrical design as part of the "let's reuse stuff" idea. If the spacecraft had been symmetrical and flown like most others have the error would have cancelled out and

  • K'Breel, Speaker for the Council, made this statement to the press:

    "We have received information that the Blue Planet is sending multiple metal invaders to our peaceful world and they will arrive in approximately a half solar cycle. This is more than sufficient time for us to make preparations for when the invaders arrive. We will gird our gelsacs for the impending battles and victory shall be ours. We will make the Blue Planet pay for their acts of hostility, and they WILL taste the bitterness of defeat!"

  • It's gonna look really bad if the Chinese and Emiratis succeed, and the US probe fails. Fortunately for Trump, that would probably happen after the election.

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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