Skip to main content

NASA’s Perseverance rover is stacked and ready for launch to Mars

NASA’s Perseverance rover is gearing up for its mission to Mars in just two months’ time. The latest step in the launch preparations is readying the rover and its descent stage to be attached to the Atlas V rocket that will transport it in a process called vehicle stacking.

The rover’s descent stage, along with some other components including the recently-name Ingenuity helicopter, is carefully lifted and placed on top of the rover itself, then attached with three flight-separation bolts. The combined package is then placed inside a black shell along with its parachute, ready to be set onto the rocket.

Recommended Videos

“Attaching the rover to the descent stage is a major milestone for the team because these are the first spacecraft components to come together for launch, and they will be the last to separate when we reach Mars,” David Gruel, the Perseverance rover assembly, test, and launch operations manager at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory said in a statement. “These two assemblies will remain firmly nestled together until they are about 65 feet [20 meters] over the surface of Mars.”

 the rocket-powered descent stage
This image of the rocket-powered descent stage sitting on to of NASA’s Perseverance rover was taken in a clean room at Kennedy Space Center on April 29, 2020. NASA/JPL-Caltech

Once the spacecraft arrives at Mars, the three bolts holding the descent stage and the rover together will be released using pyrotechnic charges, allowing a part of the decent procedure called the “sky crane maneuver” to begin.

Because the Perseverance rover is larger and heavier than previous Mars rovers, it cannot use an airbag landing system like those before the Curiosity rover. Instead, the sky crane system has nylon ropes hanging from the descent stage which hold the rover in place 25 feet (7.6 meters) below. When the rover touches down on the surface, it senses the contact and uses blades to cut the ropes, allowing the descent stage to lift off and move away. The advantage of this system is that Perseverance will land neatly on the surface with no parts of airbags or other components in its way.

The launch of the rover is scheduled for summer this year, will a launch window opening on July 17. If everything goes as planned, the rover should land on Mars in the Jezero Crater on February 18 2021, where it can begin its mission of searching for signs of ancient life.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
Elon Musk shares new target date for Starship voyage to Mars
elon musk stylized image

SpaceX is aiming to launch “about five” uncrewed Starship voyages to Mars in two years’ time, according to a post on X (formerly Twitter) by CEO Elon Musk on Sunday.

Musk said that if the uncrewed missions land safely on the red planet, then the first crewed mission could take place as early as 2028, but he added that “if we encounter challenges, then the crewed missions will be postponed another two years” due to the alignment of Earth and Mars that makes such journeys possible. He continued: “We want to enable anyone who wants to be a space traveler to go to Mars! That means you or your family or friends -- anyone who dreams of great adventure. Eventually, there will be thousands of Starships going to Mars and it will a glorious sight to see! Can you imagine? Wow.”

Read more
Europa Clipper overcomes transistor issue and is ready for launch next month
Europa Clipper.

This May, engineers working on NASA's Europa Clipper had to deliver the kind of news that no one wants to announce: There was a problem with the transistors on their spacecraft. Europa Clipper is heading to the moon of the same name, which orbits around Jupiter -- and that giant planet has an intense environment of radiation around it that is hostile to electronics. Engineers were concerned that some of the transistors may be damaged by that radiation, potentially shortening the life of the spacecraft.

Engineers told The New York Times of reacting to the issue with a "howl of terror." They worked on the problem throughout the summer, scrambling to figure out how many transistors would be affected and what impact that could have on the spacecraft and its mission. With launch date quickly approaching, they had only a short window to work in.

Read more
Check out this incredible cloud atlas of Mars
Arsia Mons Elongated Cloud (AMEC): This elongated cloud has formed as a result of wind encountering the Arsia Mons mountains. It forms almost every day during a specific season, from early morning until noon.

Photographing a beautiful sky is a great passion for many here on Earth, but it can be just as striking on another planet too. Researchers recently presented a stunning new "cloud atlas" of Mars: a database containing 20 years' worth of images of clouds and storms observed on the red planet.

The cloud atlas is available online, inviting you to browse the many images of martian weather captured by the Mars Express spacecraft. This European Space Agency mission has been in orbit around Mars since 2005, and has taken hundreds of images of the planet using its High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) instrument.

Read more