Skip to main content

NASA’s Mars helicopter will fly furthest yet in next flight

In the year since NASA’s Mars helicopter first hovered above the martian surface to become the only aircraft to achieve powered, controlled flight on another planet, Ingenuity has taken 23 additional flights.

Now the mission team at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) is prepping the 4-pound, 19-inch-high helicopter for a record-breaking flight of 704 meters, a distance that will smash its current record by 77 meters.

Recommended Videos

To give that some context, that’s just short of the distance between the Lincoln Memorial and the far end of the Reflecting Pool, or six-and-a-half NFL football fields. Not bad for an autonomous flying machine in a world 166 million miles from our own.

NASA’s Mars helicopter features four specially made carbon-fiber blades arranged as two rotors that turn in opposite directions at between 2,400 and 2,800 rpm. These speeds allow the machine to achieve lift in the challenging martian atmosphere, which is 100 times thinner than Earth’s.

Ingenuity’s smarts are contained in a small box-like fuselage, which also includes a small heater to help it deal with the planet’s extremely cold conditions.

NASA has been using Ingenuity to test its technology with the aim of building a more advanced flying machine for future missions. As Ingenuity has already been doing for Perseverance, aircraft can assist ground-based planetary rovers by using an onboard camera to check if a location is worth further exploration. It can also search out the most efficient rover route between locations of scientific interest and map a planet’s surface from just a few meters in the air, photographing the surface in much greater detail than a high-flying orbiter.

Ingenuity completed its most recent flight, the 24th, on April 3, the team at JPL revealed this week. The flight lasted almost 70 seconds and covered a distance of just over 47 meters at a top speed of 3.2 mph. No date has yet been set for its record-breaking 25th flight.

The current Mars mission is using Perseverance to search for signs of ancient microbial life on the planet and to collect rock samples for return to Earth by a later mission. Perseverance and Ingenuity are also gathering data that could be useful for the first crewed mission to Mars, though NASA has yet to offer a solid date for the highly anticipated endeavor.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
NASA’s InSight lander looks into Mars to study the planet’s core
This artist’s concept shows a cutaway of Mars, along with the paths of seismic waves from two separate quakes in 2021. Detected by NASA’s InSight mission, these seismic waves were the first ever identified to enter another planet’s core.

NASA's Mars InSight lander may have come to the end of its mission last year, but data from the lander is still being used to contribute to science. Data that the lander collected on marsquakes, seismic events that are similar to earthquakes, has been used to get the best look yet at Mars's core.

The lander was armed with a highly sensitive seismometer instrument that could detect seismic waves as they moved through the martian interior. By looking at the way in which these waves bounced off boundaries and moved at different speeds through different materials, scientists can work out what the inside of a planet is composed of. The latest findings show that the martian core is around 2,220 miles across, which is smaller than previously thought. The core is also denser than previously believed The results also showed that around one-fifth of the core, which is made up of liquid iron alloy, is composed of sulfur, oxygen, carbon, and hydrogen.

Read more
NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover gets a speed boost
curiosity clay samples water

While NASA’s newer Perseverance rover tends to get all the headlines these days, the Curiosity rover also continues to explore the surface of Mars more than a decade after it reached the red planet.

The team at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), which oversees the Mars rover missions, has just given Curiosity a new lease of life after installing its first major software update in seven years.

Read more
NASA’s Mars helicopter aces milestone 50th flight
Mars helicopter

Ingenuity Mars Helicopter Celebrates 50 Flights

NASA’s plucky Ingenuity helicopter has completed its 50th flight on Mars.

Read more