Nasa’s new Mars rover hits the dusty red road in first trip

6 March 2021, 17:04

A photo showing tyre marks taken during the first drive of the Perseverance rover on Mars
Space Mars Rover. Picture: PA

The Perseverance rover completed a drive lasting more than half an hour.

Nasa’s newest Mars rover hit the dusty red road this week, putting 21 feet on the odometer in its first test drive.

The Perseverance rover ventured from its landing position on Thursday, two weeks after setting down on the red planet to seek signs of past life.

The roundabout, back and forth drive lasted 33 minutes and went so well that more driving was scheduled for Friday and Saturday for the the six-wheeled rover.

“This is really the start of our journey here,” said Rich Rieber, the Nasa engineer who plotted the route.

“This is going to be like the Odyssey, adventures along the way, hopefully no Cyclops, and I’m sure there will be stories aplenty written about it.”

In its first drive, Perseverance went forward 13 feet, took a 150-degree left turn, then backed up eight feet. During a news conference on Friday, Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, shared photos of its tracks over and around small rocks.

“I don’t think I’ve ever been happier to see wheel tracks and I’ve seen a lot of them,” said engineer Anais Zarifian.

Flight controllers are still checking all of Perseverance’s systems. So far, everything is looking good. The rover’s seven-foot robot arm, for instance, flexed its muscles for the first time on Tuesday.

Mars Landing
A composite image of Mars taken from the Perseverance rover (Nasa JPL/Caltech/AP)

Before the car-size rover can head for an ancient river delta to collect rocks for eventual return to Earth, it must drop its so-called protective “belly pan” and release an experimental helicopter named Ingenuity.

As it turns out, Perseverance landed right on the edge of a potential helicopter landing strip — a suitable flat spot, according to Mr Rieber.

Nasa plans to drive out of this landing strip, ditch the pan, then return for Ingenuity’s highly anticipated test flight. All this should be accomplished by late spring.

Scientists are debating whether to take the smoother route to reach the nearby delta or a possibly tougher way with intriguing remnants from that once-watery time three billion to four billion years ago.

Perseverance — Nasa’s biggest and most elaborate rover yet — became the ninth US spacecraft to successfully land on Mars on February 18.

SCIENCE Mars
(PA Graphics)

China hopes to land its smaller rover — currently orbiting the red planet — in another few months.

Nasa scientists, meanwhile, announced on Friday they had named Perseverance’s touchdown site in honour of the late science fiction writer Octavia E Butler, who grew up next door to the JPL in Pasadena.

She was one of the first African Americans to receive mainstream attention for science fiction. Her works included Bloodchild and Other Stories and Parable of the Sower.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Elon Musk

How Elon Musk’s influence has grown both online and offline in 2024

Hands holding the iPhone 16

How smartphones powered the AI boom in 2024

London skyline

US investor to snap up maritime AI specialist Windward for £216m

Donald Trump

How will a second Trump presidency impact the tech world in 2025?

Morning drone (002)

Drone project reaches ‘important milestone’ with final trial flights

Prime Minister hosts Chanukah reception

AI tech giants should not be subsidised by British creatives, Starmer signals

Dr Craig Wright arrives at the Rolls Building in London for the trial earlier this year (Lucy North/PA)

Computer scientist behind false Bitcoin founder claim sentenced for contempt

Google has been contacted for comment (PA)

ICO criticises Google over ‘irresponsible’ advertising tracking change

Some 22% of consumers have increased their use of second-hand shopping apps in the past three months (Depop/PA)

Millions of Britons earning average £146 a month on second-hand platforms

ChatGPT being used via WhatsApp

ChatGPT joins WhatsApp to allow anyone to access the AI chatbot

A Facebook home page on a laptop screen

Meta fined more than 250 million euro by Irish data commission following breach

Finger poised above WhatsApp app on smartphone

Ending use of WhatsApp is ‘clear admission’ Government was wrong, claim Tories

Phone with WhatsApp on the screen

Scottish Government to cease use of WhatsApp by spring, says Forbes

Open AI

OpenAI rolls out ChatGPT search engine tool to all users

Most people happy to share health data to develop artificial intelligence

Government launches consultation on copyrighted material being used to train AI

Debbie Weinstein

Google names UK executive as president for Europe, Middle East and Africa