Nasa releases new video of Perseverance rover landing on Mars - live updates
Nasa releases new footage from Perseverance landing on Mars
Incredible first audio from planet released
Major milestones captured during final minutes of entry, descent, and landing
'These images are the stuff of our dreams' says Nasa scientist
Nasa has released new video footage from its Perseverance rover showing the moment it touched down on Mars.
The plutonium-powered rover, which is 10ft long, nine feet wide, seven foot high and weighs 126kg, parachuted down onto the red planet on Thursday evening and has begun its epic quest to search for signs of ancient life.
Nasa chose the Jezero crater as its landing site, in the hope that its boulders, ridges, cliffs and pits could be a promising spot to find signs that life once existed.
08:26 PM
'We only missed by 5 metres'
Now Al Chen says his team have total confidence in their navigation system and the way it communicates between the rover and Nasa HQ. He then says that thanks to this system, Perseverance was able to hit its planned landing zone with almost pinpoint accuracy. Remarkably, he says that the rover landed only 5 metres from the planned landing spot.
08:22 PM
What about future larger spacecraft?
Now the Nasa scientists are asked the question we all want to ask: does this bring closer the prospect of human travel to Mars?
Al Chen jokes that "as far as I'm aware there are no landing pads on Mars" – and says Perseverance's data will be crucial for future missions to the planet.
One problem is the type and quantity of dust that is on the surface of Mars, which makes landings tricky for craft.
Mr Chen calls the rover's finds a "rich treasure trove" of potential information that Nasa can use to plan future space missions.
08:11 PM
Stunning new images captured from Mars
07:43 PM
First sounds recorded from Mars
New video from Nasa's Mars 2020 Perseverance rover chronicles major milestones during the final minutes of its entry, descent, and landing (EDL) on the Red Planet on February 18 as the spacecraft plummeted, parachuted, and rocketed toward the surface of Mars. A microphone on the rover also has provided the first audio recording of sounds from Mars.
It sounds like a low-frequency buzz, to the untrained ear. About 10 seconds into the 60-second recording, a Martian breeze is audible for a few seconds, as are mechanical sounds of the rover operating on the surface.
If you are feeling overwhelmed by the amount of visual content @NASAPersevere has captured, take a breath and enjoy what it would sound like to sit on the surface of Mars with the rover: pic.twitter.com/ZclPsAVIMd
— NASA (@NASA) February 22, 2021
A microphone attached to the rover did not collect usable data during the descent, but the commercial off-the-shelf device survived the highly dynamic descent to the surface and obtained sounds from Jezero Crater on Feb. 20.
From the moment of parachute inflation, the camera system covers the entirety of the descent process, showing some of the rover’s intense ride to Mars’ Jezero Crater. The footage from high-definition cameras aboard the spacecraft starts seven miles above the surface, showing the supersonic deployment of the most massive parachute ever sent to another world, and ends with the rover’s touchdown in the crater.
07:36 PM
Landing on Mars: when the dust clears... tranquility and grandeur
"Landing on Mars is a rush of tension, drama, and noise," tweeted the official Nasa Perseveranceaccount. "Then, when the dust clears: tranquility and grandeur. "
The landscape of Mars is magical to see. It appears like a dusty barren landscape with a reddish tinge, pocked-marked by craters.
Landing on Mars is a rush of tension, drama, and noise. Then, when the dust clears: tranquility and grandeur.#CountdownToMars
Explore in 3D in the YouTube app: https://t.co/iz9YIvEsvy
More images: https://t.co/Ex1QDo3eC2 pic.twitter.com/cj7NOpGysR— NASA's Perseverance Mars Rover (@NASAPersevere) February 22, 2021
07:16 PM
'These images are the stuff of our dreams' says Nasa
The roughly three-minute video of the landing has just dropped. You can watch the moment here.
Your front-row seat to my Mars landing is here. Watch how we did it.#CountdownToMars pic.twitter.com/Avv13dSVmQ
— NASA's Perseverance Mars Rover (@NASAPersevere) February 22, 2021
"These images are the stuff of our dreams," says Al Chen, Nasa's Entry, Descent, and Landing lead, at the press conference.
"These are really amazing videos," said Michael Watkins, director of Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. "This is the first time we've ever been able to capture an event like the landing on Mars."
07:15 PM
Press conference begins
David Gruel, Nasa's Test and Launch Operations Manager, is speaking. He says the team put two cameras on the Rover. One on the top and one on bottom, which captured the landing. There is also a microphone on the port side, but he said unfortunately it did not catch audio.