Skip to main content

Watch Mars landing highlights, including first images from rover

NASA's Perseverance Rover Lands Successfully on Mars (Highlight Reel)

NASA has posted a highlights reel (above) showing the final nail-biting moments at Mission Control in California as the team waited for confirmation that its Perseverance rover had landed safely on the surface of Mars.

Recommended Videos

The video, which mixes animated footage of the landing procedure with clips from Mission Control captured as the rover approached the Martian surface, also includes the very first image from Perseverance beamed back just a few moments after touchdown. The image isn’t the greatest quality, but that because it’s from the rover’s hazard camera, which will help the vehicle drive around Mars. Before long, we should be receiving full color, high-definition imagery, and video too.

Perseverance landed on Mars mid-afternoon ET on Thursday, February 18, marking the end of a six-and-a-half-month space voyage.

The most challenging part of the journey came at the very end when the spacecraft carrying the rover entered what’s known as the “seven minutes of terror.” During this period, the spacecraft had to autonomously perform a series of carefully timed maneuvers and at the same time deal with extreme speed and temperature changes as it descended to Mars’ Jezero Crater.

The highlights video shows the team’s jubilation when news came through from the red planet, currently around 125 million miles away, of the rover’s successful landing.

The mission, overseen by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, will soon see the highly advanced Perseverance rover searching the surface of Mars for signs of ancient life, as well as collecting Mars samples for later return to Earth. Perseverance is also carrying with it a small drone-like vehicle called Ingenuity that will soon attempt the first powered, controlled flight on another planet.

“This landing is one of those pivotal moments for NASA, the United States, and space exploration globally — when we know we are on the cusp of discovery and sharpening our pencils, so to speak, to rewrite the textbooks,” acting NASA administrator Steve Jurczyk said after the rover’s safe arrival.

Jurczyk added: “The Mars 2020 Perseverance mission embodies our nation’s spirit of persevering even in the most challenging of situations, inspiring, and advancing science and exploration. The mission itself personifies the human ideal of persevering toward the future and will help us prepare for human exploration of the red planet.”

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
How NASA is using AI on the Perseverance rover to study Mars rocks
akdjf alkjdhf lk

Space engineers have been using AI in rovers for some time now -- hence why today's Mars explorers are able to pick a safe landing site and to drive around a region autonomously. But something they haven't been able to do before now is to do science themselves, as most of that work is done by scientists on Earth who analyze data and point the rover toward targets they want to investigate.

Now, though, NASA's Perseverance rover is taking the first steps toward autonomous science investigation on Mars. The rover has been testing out an AI capability for the last three years, which allows it to search for and identify particular minerals in Mars rocks. The system works using the rover's PIXL instrument (Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry), a spectrometer that uses light to analyze what rocks are made of. The software, called adaptive sampling, looks though PIXL's data and identifies minerals to be studied in more detail.

Read more
Mushroom houses: NASA wants to grow its own Mars habitats from fungi
A stool constructed out of mycelia after two weeks of growth. The next step is a baking process process that leads to a clean and functional piece of furniture.

Bricks produced using mycelium, yard waste, and wood chips as a part of the myco-architecture project. Similar materials could be used to build habitats on the Moon or Mars. NASA

When future astronauts set out for the moon or for Mars, they'll need some shelter. And while you might imagine cities on other planets being made of steel, or glass, or some high-tech carbon fiber compound, NASA has other ideas. The agency is funding research into growing their own habitats out of fungi.

Read more
Auroras and radiation from solar storms spotted on Mars
The specks in this scene were caused by charged particles from a solar storm hitting a camera aboard NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover. Curiosity uses its navigation cameras to try and capture images of dust devils and wind gusts, like the one seen here.

The specks in this scene were caused by charged particles from a solar storm hitting a camera aboard NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover. Curiosity uses its navigation cameras to try and capture images of dust devils and wind gusts, like the one seen here. NASA/JPL-Caltech

The recent solar storms caused epic events here on Earth, where auroras were visible across much of the globe last month. These storms, caused by heightened activity from the sun, don't only affect our planet though -- they also affect Mars. NASA missions like the Curiosity rover have been observing the effects of solar storms there, where the very thin atmosphere creates a potentially dangerous radiation environment. If we ever want to send people to visit the red planet, we're going to need to learn more about this radiation and how it's affected by events like solar storms.

Read more