Wreckage from NASA’s Perseverance mission to Mars in 2021 looks like, well, a crashed UFO. See, we’re the scary ones. πΎ
Tag: mars
The helicopter on Mars
I’m taking a minute to appreciate that, despite all the challenges we currently face here on Earth, we’re flying a helicopter around on another planet. π€― We can still do incredible things.
This image goes with my continued fascination that we’re invading Mars instead of the them invading us. If there were really such as thing as Martians, then they surely would have blown this helicopter to smithereens and sent us an ultimatum by now. π€·π»ββοΈ
(Also: NASA, can I use this as an album cover? Some stylish text would fit nicely against the pale Martian sky.)
“Skycrane maneuver has started…”
We Earthlings have a history of fearing Martians invading our planet π½, so it’s always amusing to watch a video of us invading them. π§π»βπ
I used to be obsessed with 7 Minutes of Terror: Curiosity Rover’s Risky Mars Landing, which shows how NASA gets a rover from hurtling 10,000 mph through space to softly kissing the surface of Mars — all within a few short minutes. It’s still an amazing video if you haven’t seen it and are interested in, well… anything cool.
My favorite part is the skycrane maneuver, which is hard to explain but looks insane. And it seems to work quite well.
βIf youβre landing a rover on Mars, thereβs no doubt this is the right way.β
In fact, this skycrane show-off maneuver works so well that NASA keeps doing it. Check out a video of the latest invasion — I mean landing — in the name of Perseverance.
