Panoramic image of Mars taken by Perseverance on February 20, 2021. (credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)
Never before, in all of our millions of years, have humans directly observed a spacecraft landing on another planet. Until now.
On Monday, NASA released a video (embedded below) that included several viewpoints from the descent of Mars Perseverance to the surface of the red planet last week. A camera on the back shell captured a view of the parachute deploying, and cameras on the descent stage and rover itself captured the final seconds of the landing.
“I can, and have, watched those videos for hours,” said NASA’s Al Chen, the lead for the entry, descent, and landing for Perseverance. “I find new stuff every time. I invite you to do so as well.”
Wells Fargo patent troll case has finance world all aquiver so Barclays, TD Bank sign up to Open Invention Network
‘O.J. Made in America’ Is a Masterful Feat of Editing
Apple Plans First iMac Desktop Redesign In Nearly a Decade
Google’s $399 iPhone Killer, A Bold CIA Privacy Move, and More News
SOSV names the 7 startups that make up MOX’s 10th cohort
Bill Gates, Elon Musk Both Warn ‘Don’t Go Too Far with Crypto Speculation’
Rookie’s code couldn’t have been so terrible that it made a supermarket spontaneously combust… right?
China creates a $50bn tech ‘aircraft carrier’ by merging two state-controlled entities