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62 votes
4 answers
12k views

How were Perseverance's cables "cut" after touching down?

In the NASA conference today regarding Perseverance's successful landing on Mars, they talked about how you can see the cable that held the rover in this picture below (I circled the cable). I'm ...
F16Falcon's user avatar
  • 703
35 votes
3 answers
6k views

Why was it necessary to program InSight with an ability to land in dust storms?

If the entire event of EDL (Entry - Descent - Landing) is going to take only 7 minutes and if the command to begin could be signalled based on ground weather conditions, why was it necessary to take ...
karthikeyan's user avatar
  • 4,479
24 votes
5 answers
17k views

Olympus Mons - viable Mars landing site?

I'm becoming interested in how Mars missions are planning their landings. One aspect I see brought up time and again is Mars' awkward atmosphere - 'just enough there that you have to care about it'. ...
Wutnaut's user avatar
  • 523
21 votes
2 answers
5k views

Could SpaceX land on the moon today?

Now that SpaceX has a bunch of flown Block 4 Falcon 9 rockets laying around, could they theoretically do a mission to the Moon with landing even if it's just a rocket with no payload? Does it work out ...
Rosen Sofroniev's user avatar
17 votes
4 answers
5k views

What is the largest hurdle of the mission to Mars?

I was shocked when I recently found out just how long it takes to get to Mars. I've been conducting a very informal survey amongst peers of how just how long people think it takes us to travel to Mars....
Wutnaut's user avatar
  • 523
17 votes
2 answers
3k views

What are the disadvantages of parachute+airbag for atmospheric landing, versus rocket-based?

After Sojourner success, repeated by Spirit and Opportunity, it seemed like we had developed a fail-proof system for atmospheric landing for our probes: there's very little that can go wrong with the ...
SF.'s user avatar
  • 55.1k
17 votes
1 answer
2k views

Are launch windows to Mars avoided if they result in landings during dust storm season?

This comment suggests that orbit before descent to Mars' surface allows a mission to delay the landing if the weather conditions are bad. I think that Tianwen-1 will be the first to put a lander rover ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
13 votes
3 answers
2k views

How precise are our Mars landings?

The idea of surface rendezvous for supply missions to a Mars expedition (either before or after arrival of a manned expedition) seems to come up every now and then. This would allow a manned ...
user's user avatar
  • 7,330
10 votes
3 answers
1k views

Won't the heat sensor probe interfere with the seismometer?

I've read that the Mars InSight Seismometer will be deployed before the HP3 probe. Won't the digging interfere with the seismometer? Or the shock produced will be small enough to be dissipated by the ...
Nereid Regulus's user avatar
10 votes
2 answers
316 views

How, in the SpaceX Mars stack, do they plan to address de novo landing sites?

Given a new, unprepared "in the field" landing site for a rocket, what is the SpaceX strategy? Are the landing legs intended to be rated to handle that kind of instability? How can they possibly be? ...
Chris B. Behrens's user avatar
9 votes
2 answers
512 views

Why cannot supersonic retropropulsion, for use in the Red Dragon lander be tested on Earth?

What is the reason that Red Dragon is testing supersonic retropropulsion on a Mars mission. Is the Earth's upper atmosphere too different to that of Mars to validate this method as a viable way of ...
Mike H's user avatar
  • 674
8 votes
3 answers
1k views

Is it probable the Red Dragon will successfully land on Mars on the first try?

Today it was revealed that SpaceX has a deal with NASA to send a Red Dragon lander to Mars, launched on a Falcon Heavy, in 2018. The plan is that it will use supersonic retro-propulsion during the ...
kim holder's user avatar
  • 21.4k
7 votes
1 answer
2k views

Could Ingenuity survive if Perseverance failed?

For the purposes of this question, we will assume that they both landed successfully. Ingenuity was deployed properly. Then, Perseverance drove away, and then Perserverance say hit a large rock and ...
Starship's user avatar
  • 3,756
7 votes
2 answers
579 views

How tall are the "cliffs of the delta" in the Perseverance rover's landing ellipse?

edit: For all the cliff-doubters in comments, here's a quote of Project Scientist Ken Farley in the new NASA video After the Landing: An Update about NASA’s Perseverance Mars Rover after ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 149k
7 votes
1 answer
110 views

Is there possible engine damage without launch platform on Mars return flight?

When a Starship has landed on Mars, there is not going to be any kind of prepared platform initially. (That may be a task for early crews to resolve). Is there the possibility that Starship, sitting ...
Paul Steele's user avatar

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