This week, NASA is celebrating an almost unfathomable milestone for the Ingenuity helicopter: 100 minutes of flight on Mars.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/Amanda Kooser
A lot has happened in the air on Mars since April 19, 2021. That was the day when NASA’s Ingenuity helicopter first lifted off from the dusty ground and proved that powered, controlled flight was possible on another planet. This week, NASA is celebrating an almost unfathomable milestone: 100 minutes of flight on Mars.with that time, but it spent those minutes in the Martian air. The solar-powered rotorcraft passed the mark over the weekend during its 57th flight on September 3.
The helicopter hitched a ride with the Perseverance rover and arrived at the Jezero Crater on Mars in early 2021. NASA classified Ingenuity as a high-risk, high-reward technology demonstration. It was meant as an experiment. Would it even be able to fly in the thin atmosphere of Mars? Would it survive the dust, wind and cold? The Ingenuity team originally planned for a five-flight demonstration. The plucky rotorcraft has since exceeded all expectations..
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
NASA's Ingenuity helicopter soars past 100 minutes of total Mars flight timeIngenuity notched the milestone on Sept. 3, during its 57th Red Planet flight.
Read more »
Zach Bryan Triples Up at No. 1 on Artist 100, Hot 100 & Billboard 200Plus, top 10 Artist 100 moves for Miley Cyrus and Tyler, the Creator.
Read more »
NASA may have unknowingly found and killed alien life on Mars 50 years ago, scientist claimsOne researcher hypothesizes that experiments carried out by NASA's Viking landers in 1976 could have inadvertently killed microbes living in Martian rocks. Other experts are skeptical.
Read more »
NASA's oxygen-generating experiment MOXIE completes Mars missionWhen the first astronauts land on Mars, they may have the descendants of a microwave-oven-size device to thank for the air they breathe and the rocket propellant that gets them home. That device, called MOXIE (Mars Oxygen In-Situ Resource Utilization Experiment), has generated oxygen for the 16th and final time aboard NASA's Perseverance rover. After the instrument proved far more successful than its creators at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) expected, its operations are concluding.
Read more »
From Drop Tests to Martian Dust: Crafting Legs for NASA’s Heaviest Mars LanderSturdy legs are needed to absorb the impact of the heaviest spacecraft to ever touch down on the Red Planet. NASA’s Perseverance rover continues to rack up tubes filled with rock core samples for the planned Mars Sample Return campaign. The joint effort by NASA and ESA (European Space Agency) see
Read more »
NASA's Ingenuity Mars helicopter reaches flight milestoneNASA's Mars helicopter, Ingenuity, has been on Mars for nearly two-and-a-half years and on its last trip reached a flight milestone.
Read more »