Science

NASA’s Perseverance rover achieves a marathon milestone on the fifth anniversary of the landing on Mars


NASA’s Perseverance rover has just crossed an impressive landmark on the Red Planet. She has now covered more than 26.2 miles (42,195 km), exactly the distance of a full marathon on land.

The rover arrived at this point while examining some fascinating ancient terrain west of Jezero Crater. Only one other spacecraft has ever made it this far on another planet: NASA’s Opportunity spacecraft did it in 2015. It’s a real accomplishment after years of tough driving across rocky, uneven terrain.

Hunting for ancient life

perseverance It landed on Mars five years ago as the most advanced rover NASA I’ve ever been sent there. The main goal of the Mars 2020 mission is simple but important: to search for signs that tiny microbes may have lived on Mars long ago.

The Perseverance rover drills into rock, pulls out thin core samples of rock and soft soil, and carefully stores them. One day soon, another NASA mission may capture these samples and return them to Earth so scientists can study them in detail.

Artificial intelligence is taking the lead

Meanwhile, the Perseverance rover also completed its first flight planned entirely by artificial intelligence. On December 8 and 10, engineers at NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory Let Amnesty International The system selects safe paths through difficult locations.

Using visual language models, the study looked at the same type of images and data that human planners typically review. The test worked well and was conducted with the help of Claude AI models from Anthropic.

Will we have more sensors and AI-enabled rovers in the future? Seems possible.

Meanwhile, you can track NASA’s Mars rover here.

See also: NASA’s Perseverance takes selfies from Lac de Charmes, its farthest voyage on Mars [WATCH]

cover:NASA



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