Three different nations have spacecraft visiting the red planet this month.
Congratulations to the United Arab Emirates, whose spacecraft Hope entered Mars orbit on February 9. Hope will study the dust storms and other Martian weather affect the speed at which Martian air leaks into outer space.
One day later, on February 10, China's Tianwen-1 joined the party. Besides being an orbiter, Tianwen carries a lander and robotic rover that will attempt touchdown in the Utopia Planitia sometime in May or June. The name of the rover will be either Hongyi, Qilin, Nezha, Chitu, Zhurong, Qiusuo, Fenghuolun, Zhuimeng, Tianxing or Xinghuo. The choice will be made by a public vote so an eleventh possibility is Spacey McSpaceface.
Then, today (18 Feb 2021) at approximately 3:44 pm EST, NASA's Perseverance rover touched down in the interior of Jezero, a 30-mile-diameter crater thought to have formed when water flowed freely on Mars. Jezero, by the way, means 'lake' in several Slavic languages.
Perseverance has bunches of cool experiments on board but I must admit I am really anxious to see what happens when they begin testing the Ingenuity Helicopter, a 4-pound, 2-rotor drone whose blades have to spin 2,000-3,000 RPM to achieve lift in the thin Martian atmosphere.
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And here's a few paragraphs from Jumper 5: Vector.
Above the table a hexagonal array of outward facing flat screens lit up as the tech moved the single page beneath a camera pickup.
I cleared my throat. “This picture was taken at 12.75 degrees below the equator, 288.596 degree longitude. The camera is pointed south-southwest. In the background you can see the bluffs rising three kilometers from the bottom of the Valles Marineris up to the Solus Planum. The near background shows the basaltic sand dunes of the Melas Chasma.”
Almost as an afterthought, I added, “That’s me in the foreground.”
Although the suit I was wearing in the picture had my usual skin-tight mechanical counter-pressure inner layer and the scuff resistant coveralls I was wearing now, it looked more like a traditional, bulky NASA spacesuit in the photo because there were also multiple thermal-insulation layers; a layer of hydrogen-rich, polymeric, nanocomposite radiation shielding; and a disposable Tyvek hazmat suit over all.
You couldn’t see any of my usual Apex Orbital or sponsor patches on my coveralls underneath all the extra layers, but the sun-protective glare visor was up and my face was clearly visible through the polycarbonate helmet.
“So, yes. We feel pretty confident that we can achieve Martian orbit.”
There was a lot of shouting, mostly from the press seats, and it took quite a while for Dr. Kannambadi to restore order.
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Steven Gould
2021-02-26 21:31:19 +0000 UTCLaer
2021-02-24 16:11:50 +0000 UTCSteven Gould
2021-02-23 19:30:24 +0000 UTCMichael Wolff
2021-02-23 10:13:58 +0000 UTCLaer
2021-02-19 22:44:42 +0000 UTCBlake Moody
2021-02-19 02:23:08 +0000 UTCElizabeth Bennefeld
2021-02-19 01:14:09 +0000 UTCChad Henderson
2021-02-19 01:07:38 +0000 UTC