NASA’s Perseverance rover split CO2 to make breathable air on Mars0
- From Around the Web, Space
- May 1, 2021
The experiment also shows that astronauts can make rocket fuel for their trip back to Earth
The experiment also shows that astronauts can make rocket fuel for their trip back to Earth
The American space agency’s Ingenuity Mars helicopter has photographed the Perseverance rover.
Perseverance’s laser hasn’t yet penetrated the mystery of a strange Martian rock near the rover’s new digs.
Vehicle had no problem going 6.5 metres, turning and backing up, then photographed its own wheel marks on planet’s surface
The rover is taking a curved route due to the Sun’s gravitational pull
NASA’s Perseverance rover launched for Mars in late July, carrying with it a small helicopter and a suite of instruments to increase exploration of the Red Planet.
The US space agency’s Perseverance robot has left Earth on a mission to try to detect life on Mars.
Radioactive plutonium is crucial for keeping this and other power-hungry deep-space missions warm and working for years on end
A Canadian scientist says helping NASA with a mission to Mars to look for signs of life is the fulfillment of a childhood dream.
Nasa’s Perseverance rover, due to launch to Mars this summer, will search an ancient crater lake for signs of past life. But if biology ever emerged on the Red Planet, how will scientists recognise it? Here, deputy project scientist Ken Williford explains what they’re looking for.