Skip to main content

How to watch NASA’s Perseverance rover land on Mars today

NASA Live: Official Stream of NASA TV

Update: NASA’s Perseverance rover has successfully landed on Mars! We’ve got all the juicy details right here.

Recommended Videos

Later today, engineers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory will attempt a feat that is terrifying and impressive in equal measures: Landing a rover on Mars. The Perseverance rover, along with its helicopter sidekick Ingenuity, has been traveling to Mars since summer last year.

Now, it’s set to arrive at the red planet on Thursday, February 18, and execute the extremely challenging landing maneuver that will allow it to touch down safely and begin its search for signs of ancient life.

How to watch the landing

The rover is scheduled to land on Mars at approximately 3:55 p.m. ET/12:55 p.m. PT on Thursday, February 18. NASA will be livestreaming coverage of the event, including mission commentary on its TV channel, NASA TV, as well as its website, beginning at 2 p.m. ET/11 a.m. PT.

You can tune in using the video embedded at the top of this page.

If you prefer to see what the engineers themselves are up to during landing, there will also be a clean feed of cameras from the Jet Propulsion Lab’s Mission Control, with mission audio only instead of commentary. You can tune into that feed via JPL’s Raw YouTube channel, or see a blend of mission control and landing commentary on JPL’s main YouTube channel.

What to expect from the landing

An illustration of NASA’s Perseverance rover landing safely on Mars. Hundreds of critical events must execute perfectly and exactly on time for the rover to land safely on Feb. 18, 2021.
An illustration of NASA’s Perseverance rover landing safely on Mars. Hundreds of critical events must be executed perfectly and exactly on time for the rover to land safely on February 18, 2021. NASA/JPL-Caltech

Perseverance is approaching its seven minutes of terror, in which the rover’s spacecraft will need to slow from 12,000 mph down to a comfortable landing speed using a combination of a parachute, a descent stage with engines pointed downward, and the rover being lowered to the surface on cables.

One of the (many) challenges of this maneuver is the communication delay of up to 20 minutes on Mars, meaning that engineers can’t control the landing directly — they have programmed the craft to perform the landing and can only wait and watch to see if it is successful.

Around half of all missions to Mars fail, and a landing is always a nail-biting event. But the NASA team can have some confidence, as both the rover and the landing procedure are very similar to the Curiosity rover, which successfully landed on Mars in 2012. Everyone is hoping for a repeat of another smooth landing.

“If there’s one thing we know, it’s that landing on Mars is never easy,” said Marc Etkind, NASA’s associate administrator for communications. “But as NASA’s fifth Mars rover, Perseverance has an extraordinary engineering pedigree and mission team. We are excited to invite the entire world to share this exciting event with us!”

In the days after the landing, on Friday, February 19, and Monday, February 22, there will be updates at 1 p.m. ET and 2 p.m. ET, respectively, on the health and status of the rover.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
How to watch NASA’s first spacewalk of 2024
A NASA spacewalk.

NASA Live: Official Stream of NASA TV

UPDATE: The spacewalk was postponed due to a "spacesuit discomfort issue." A new schedule has yet to be announced.

Read more
NASA to help with the launch of Europe’s unlucky Mars rover
An artist's impression of the Rosalind Franklin rover on Mars.

An artist's impression of the Rosalind Franklin rover on Mars. ESA/Mlabspace

Europe's unlucky Mars rover, known as Rosalind Franklin, has gotten a boost thanks to a new cooperation agreement with NASA. The European Space Agency (ESA) had previously partnered with Russian space agency Roscosmos on the rover project, but that was suspended following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Now, NASA has formally agreed to contribute launch services and parts of the landing propulsion system to the project, aiming for a 2028 launch.

Read more
NASA selects 9 companies to work on low-cost Mars projects
This mosaic is made up of more than 100 images captured by NASA’s Viking 1 orbiter, which operated around Mars from 1976 to 1980. The scar across the center of the planet is the vast Valles Marineris canyon system.

NASA is expanding its plans for Mars, looking at not only a big, high-budget, long-term project to bring back a sample from Mars but also smaller, lower-cost missions to enable exploration of the red planet. The agency recently announced it has selected nine private companies that will perform a total of 12 studies into small-scale projects for enabling Mars science.

The companies include big names in aerospace like Lockheed Martin and United Launch Services, but also smaller companies like Redwire Space and Astrobotic, which recently landed on the surface of the moon. Each project will get a 12-week study to be completed this summer, with NASA looking at the results to see if it will incorporate any of the ideas into its future Mars exploration plans.

Read more