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NASA engineers expected their Mars
helicopter to crash after 5 liftoffs. It just landed its 15th
flight.
NASA sent its Ingenuity helicopter to Mars with no guarantee that it would
successfully fly.
But it has flown higher, farther, and faster than engineers had
hoped.
NASA said Ingenuity would likely crash by flight five, but it just landed
safely for the 15th time.
NASA employees had a moonshot idea as they were building the Perseverance
rover: What if it carried a little helicopter to Mars?
Engineers didn't know if a helicopter would work on Mars. It would be hard
to lift off in air with 1% the density of Earth's atmosphere. That's the
equivalent of flying at three times the height of Mount Everest. But NASA hoped
to prove it was possible through a technology demonstration.
NASA engineers built a little rotorcraft called Ingenuity, then packed it
into the last available space in Perseverance's belly. The engineers weren't
sure that Ingenuity would even survive its first night on the cold Martian
surface. They also feared it wouldn't fly when they gave the command, or that it
would crash during one of its five planned flights.
But Ingenuity dispelled those fears time and again. On Saturday, the
tissue-box-sized drone completed its 15th flight.
NASA is still processing data from the latest aerial escapade. But if the
flight went according to plan, that would mean Ingenuity rose nearly 40 feet
into the air, then zipped over 1,332 feet of Martian ground in just under 129
seconds.
NASA has been waiting for its Mars helicopter to crash
On February 18, Ingenuity and Perseverance landed in Jezero Crater, the
dried-up bed of an ancient lake. Scientists think it's possible that Lake Jezero
hosted an ecosystem of Martian microbes more than 3.5 billion years ago. If such
alien microbes once existed, they could be fossilized in the mineral deposits
that fell to the bottom of the lake and became rock.
At first, engineers didn't expect Ingenuity to fly higher than 15 feet
above Jezero Crater. Project manager MiMi Aung said in early April that by the
fifth flight, the helicopter "would be unlikely to land safely, because we'll
start going into unsurveyed areas."
"If we do have a bad landing, that will be the end of mission," she added.
"The lifetime will be determined by how well it lands, pretty much."
But Ingenuity has stuck the landing at least 14 times (and likely 15,
pending NASA's confirmation of the details of the latest flight).
After its first five flights, Ingenuity performed so well that NASA gave it
a 30-day extended mission. On its first bonus flight, flight six, the helicopter
flew over previously unsurveyed terrain.
Since then, it has visited several unsurveyed locations, over rocky terrain
and rippled sand.
During those flights, Ingenuity took up-close photos of outcroppings and
rock fields where the Perseverance team was considering sending the rover. NASA
then used the images to identify safe, flat routes the rover could follow.
Ingenuity's pictures also helped scientists determine what kinds of rocks were
in the area - information that could offer clues about Jezero Crater's past if
Perseverance were to take samples from them.
"The ability to fly the helicopter out into terrain that the rover cannot
possibly traverse, and bring back scientific data - this is extremely important
for future missions that could combine a rover with a reconnaissance
helicopter," Perseverance scientist Ken Farley said in an April briefing.
mars dirt rocks brown color photo from ingenuity helicopter flight
Ingenuity captured this photo during the helicopter's 13th flight on
September 5, 2021. NASA/JPL-Caltech
When the helicopter outlasted its 30-day extension, NASA gave it another
one. The agency decided to keep flying Ingenuity until the helicopter crashed or
interfered with Perseverance's operations. Neither has happened yet.
In fact, Ingenuity has operated flawlessly for almost every flight. It had
one rough ride in May, when a technical glitch caused it to roll and pitch
mid-flight. But the helicopter still landed safely.
For its last two flights, NASA pushed Ingenuity even harder by increasing
the helicopter's rotor-spinning speed.
To generate enough lift in the thin Martian atmosphere, Ingenuity must spin
its two pairs of blades in opposite directions at 2,400 rotations per minute
(rpm). But the air is even thinner now that summer is in full swing at Jezero
Crater. That's because winter conditions at the planet's south pole turn carbon
dioxide into snow and ice, removing some of the gas from the atmosphere. So the
blades have recently sped up to 2,700 rpm.
Ingenuity has now flown like that twice.
NASA is planning another four to seven flights to bring the helicopter back
to the site where Perseverance first landed on Mars. Beyond that, the agency
hasn't disclosed its plans.
Eventually, NASA hopes to send more ambitious helicopters to Mars - and
possibly to other worlds. Space drones similar to Ingenuity could someday survey
difficult terrain from above, study large regions faster than a rover can, and
even do reconnaissance for astronauts.
NASA is already developing one such helicopter mission: A rotorcraft called
Dragonfly is set to launch toward Saturn's moon Titan in 2027. It aims to
investigate whether that methane-rich world could host alien life.
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