NASA’s Perseverance rover has launched: It’s a stepping stone to send humans to Mars
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NASA launched its new Perseverance rover to Mars to explore the planet’s geology, collect samples and search for “signs of past microbial life.” USA TODAY
BREVARD COUNTY, Fla. – It’s the summer of Mars.
In the past few weeks, two different spacecraft have launched to the red planet and on July 30, one more was sent out.
After the United Arab Emirates and China successfully launched their spacecraft to Mars earlier this month, the United States has gotten in on the action.
United Launch Alliance’s Atlas V rocket, equipped with NASA’s Mars Perseverance rover, launched Thursday morning from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.
Perseverance would be NASA’s fifth rover to reach the Martian surface.
NASA’s Mars Perseverance rover will store rock and soil samples in sealed tubes on the planet’s surface for future missions to retrieve, as seen in this illustration.
(Photo: NASA)
Video: Watch an Atlas V rocket launch NASA’s Perseverance rover to Mars
Perseverance will bring the space agency one step closer in taking humans to Mars – an initiative that’s been a long time coming.
“Perseverance is … the bridge between science and human exploration that demonstrates how the two can support and reinforce each other,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA’s Associate Administrator for the Science Mission Directorate during a media teleconference last week.
“Basically, Perseverance will bring all human senses to Mars. We’ll sense the air around it, see and scan the horizon. Hear the planet with microphones on the surface for the first time,” Zurbuchen continued. “Feel it as it picks up samples and caches them. Perhaps even taste (the samples) … as other instruments sample the chemistry and the rocks and soil around it. As humans prepare for the greatest adventure here in (human) exploration of Mars, our robots can help.”
The new Mars rover, Perseverance, will collect and seal samples that can be returned to Earth on a future mission; it also has a helicopter drone. Florida Today
Perseverance marks the first time the space agency attempts a sample-return mission from Mars or from any other planet.
Throughout its 10-year mission, the rover will attempt to search for past signs of extraterrestrial life by collecting and caching Martian rock samples. Then in 2026, another mission will send a sample return lander to collect the Martian samples and return them to Earth for scientists to study.
An artist’s rendering of the new Mars Rover Perseverance, which is expected to reach the Red Planet in 2021.
(Photo: NASA)
“It’s going to be the first launch off of the planet Mars,” Zurbuchen told FLORIDA Today, part of the USA TODAY Network, in February. “But we’re already thinking about how to launch off the (red) planet with people because that’s going to be the core piece of the crowning achievement of that Artemis program (NASA’s program to head back to the moon by 2024).”
Aside from learning how to launch off another planet, NASA also needs to figure out how to sustain human life on Mars so the space agency can eventually send astronauts to the Martian surface, NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine told reporters during a Monday pre-launch teleconference from Kennedy Space Center.
Perseverance will help the space agency tackle that issue.
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One of the rover’s instruments, which is called the Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment or MOXIE, will attempt to demonstrate how future explorers might produce oxygen from the Martian atmosphere for propellant and for breathing.
“That’s a really exciting mission that is a precursor to an eventual human mission to Mars,” Bridenstine said.
Follow reporter Antonia Jaramillo on Twitter at @AntoniaJ_11.
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