NASA is Portugalsmoothing out the final details of its future program to bring back treasured martian samples, also known as the Mars Sample Return Program, and its new helicopters might make future missions much simpler.
The proposed system for retrieving and returning samples from Mars to Earth is in what's called the conceptual design phase, a period when scientists and designers inspect every crucial facet of the return plan and make necessary changes to ensure success. Previously, the plan included several steps to introduce a Sample Fetch Rover into missions, which is now replaced by two (really cool and kind of cute) recovery helicopters within the main Sample Retrieval Lander.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This design is spearheaded by both NASA and the European Space Agency. The European Space Agency is developing the Earth Return Orbiter, a device that will actually make the historic round-trip from Earth to Mars and back again, NASA explained, as well as a Sample Transfer Arm that will place sample tubes within the device. The new changes will lead scientists to begin building the first prototypes over the next year.
The alterations to the program's novel design are inspired by recent successes in ongoing missions, says Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator for science at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “There are some significant and advantageous changes to the plan, which can be directly attributed to Perseverance’s recent successes at Jezero and the amazing performance of our Mars helicopter,” Zurbuchen wrote in the announcement.
The current Mars helicopter, known as Ingenuity, was first launched in July 2020 on the back of Mars' Perseverance rover, and was used as a test for sustained, controlled flight on the surface of another planet. Ingenuity's since completed several successful test flights, hovering around the planet's surface and returning back to land, and was the first flight of its kind in any world beyond Earth, NASA explained.
"Working together on historic endeavors like Mars Sample Return not only provides invaluable data about our place in the universe but brings us closer together right here on Earth,” said Zurbuchen.
Simultaneously, a collection of samples is being retrieved by NASA’s Perseverance rover in the planet's Jezero Crater, which will then be sent back to our home planet for study. In the new design, beloved Perseverance will act as the primary means of delivering samples to the Sample Retrieval Lander alongside the helicopters.
The plan has excited many interested in the Red Planet for a long while. On July 25, representatives from NASA and the European Space Agency laid out the current plan for sample return, which sets the launch of the Earth Return Orbiter and Sample Retrieval Lander in fall 2027 and summer 2028, respectively.
But we can't get too excited just yet. The Mars Sample Return Program isn't estimated to actually return any samples until 2033. Until then, we'll simply stare at the beautiful, sometimes strange, images captured by good ol' Perseverance.
Nintendo hid a copy of the NES game 'Golf' on every SwitchNeil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett superfans, prepare to be unbelievably excitedNicole Kidman's powerful Emmy speech sheds light on domestic violenceCassini, one of humanity's best spacecraft, is dead at SaturnEmmys: All the Donald Trump jokesThis app collects women's stories to fight harassment in developing countriesSterling K. Brown's excellent Emmys speech was completed backstage, after it was cut offBeware of fake forecasts for Hurricane JoseThe woman who coBlocking hate speech from isn't hard, tech companies just need to careNeil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett superfans, prepare to be unbelievably excitedHere's what inspires the White Helmets, Syria's special group of heroes'See' sounds around you with these eyeglasses for the hard of hearingDad of the year proves anyone can get into esportsGoogle goes big in Asia with mobile payment app for hundreds of millions of peopleInsane Clown Posse's Juggalo March takes to the D.C. National Mall, and the photos are epicEmmys 2017 winners: Full listBluetooth might let hackers into your phoneWill David S. Pumpkins return this Halloween?You can finally "snooze" annoying people on Facebook This year, I'm thankful for Chris Evans and his 'Knives Out' sweater Huawei launches its own iPad Pro, calls it MatePad Pro Take 50% off toasty outdoor apparel at Columbia Sportswear Ed Sheeran will sing about going 90 mph, but doesn't condone driving that fast Daisy the dog gets a second chance at motherhood after losing her puppies Lena Dunham is having a Rihanna moment with her new tattoo, whether you want her to or not Badass, chain This 'Basket of Deplorables' board game is perfect for Trump haters The new Interior secretary rode a horse to work because why not Tinder bans racist, sexist bro for life on National Pig Day Taylor Swift is cool and super pumped for Lorde's new song Huawei out 'Watchmen' Episode 6: Nothing to explain but lots to say Watch the new 'Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker' clip: They fly now. Elon Musk says Tesla might make a smaller Cybertruck Are foodie millennials really fueling food waste? Sean Spicer mistakenly announced Donald Trump as the new HUD secretary Disney's Baby Yoda merch is getting rained on harder than wet season in Dagobah Uber is done giving lucrative incentives to drivers in its fastest growing market 'Blade Runner' blew his mind. Now this artist uses AI to explore human consciousness.
2.3657s , 10134.0703125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Portugal】,Exquisite Information Network