Mars Helicopter successfully completed its 52nd flight, despite communication dropouts due to challenging Martian terrain. Contact with the helicopter was re-established on June 28, following a temporary blackout due to a hill blocking the signal between it and the Perseverance rover. Flight 53, scheduled for the coming weeks, will further explore Mars’s westward terrain.
The intrepid rotorcraft may head skyward again within the next couple of weeks.
The 52nd flight of NASA’s Ingenuity Mars Helicopter is now in the official mission logbook as a success. The flight took place back on April 26, but mission controllers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California lost contact with the helicopter as it descended toward the surface for landing.
The Ingenuity team expected the communications dropout because a hill stood between the helicopter’s landing location and the Perseverance rover’s position, blocking communication between the two. The rover acts as a radio relay between the helicopter and mission controllers at JPL. In anticipation of this loss of communications, the Ingenuity team had already developed re-contact plans for when the rover would drive back within range. Contact was re-established June 28 when Perseverance crested the hill and could see Ingenuity again.
The goal of Flight 52, a 1,191-foot (363-meter) and 139-second-long flight, was to reposition the helicopter and take images of the Martian surface for the rover’s science team.
“The portion of Jezero Crater the rover and helicopter are currently exploring has a lot of rugged terrain, which makes communications dropouts more likely,” said JPL’s Josh Anderson, the Ingenuity team lead. “The team’s goal is to keep Ingenuity ahead of Perseverance, which occasionally involves temporarily pushing beyond communication limits. We’re excited to be back in communications range with Ingenuity and receive confirmation of Flight 52.”
Sixty-three days is a long time to wait for the results of a flight, but the data coming in indicates all is well with the first aircraft on another world. If the remainder of Ingenuity’s health checks are equally rosy, the helicopter may fly again within the next couple of weeks.
The target for Flight 53 is an interim airfield to the west, from which the team plans to perform another westward flight to a new base of operations near a rocky outcrop the Perseverance team is interested in exploring.
Więcej o kreatywności
Innowacyjny helikopter marsjański jest dziełem Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), które zajmuje się również zarządzaniem projektami w imieniu Kwatery Głównej NASA. Wsparcie dla projektu pochodzi od Dyrekcji Misji Naukowych NASA. Dwóch głównych uczestników fazy rozwoju innowacji to Ames Research Center NASA, zlokalizowane w Dolinie Krzemowej w Kalifornii, oraz Langley Research Center NASA, zlokalizowane w Hampton w Wirginii. Instytucje te zapewniły niezbędną analizę osiągów lotu i wskazówki techniczne. Partnerzy branżowi, w tym AeroVironment Inc. oraz Qualcomm i SolAero, przyczyniając się do procesu projektowania i dostarczając kluczowe komponenty pojazdów. Lockheed Space podjął się zadania zaprojektowania i wyprodukowania Mars Helicopter Delivery System.
Na czele projektu Ingenuity Mars Helicopter w siedzibie NASA stoi dyrektor programowy Dave Lavery.
„Nieuleczalny student. Społeczny mediaholik. Niezależny czytelnik. Myśliciel. Alkoholowy ninja”.
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