NASA tests supersonic parachute for Mars to be used in 2020 mission [VIDEO]

NASA has successfully tested a supersonic parachute which is meant to be used in its Mars 2020 mission. The parachute was launched on a Black Brant IX sounding rocket from its facility in Wallops Island, Virginia on October 4, 2017. It is undergoing further development and would be used in future Mars missions.

The first flight of an advanced supersonic parachute system for Mars 2020—NASA’s next Mars rover. This video is narrated by Ian Clark, the test's technical lead from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. The test took place on Oct. 4, 2017, at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility, Virginia. At the moment of full inflation, the parachute is going 1.8 times the speed of sound or nearly 1,300 miles an hour, and generating nearly 35,000 pounds of drag force—drag that would be necessary to help slow a payload down as it was entering the Martian atmosphere. This is the first of several tests in support of NASA’s Mars 2020 mission. NASA

NASA will use special supersonic parachutes to land its Mars rover mission which has been set to launch in 2020. The parachute has been designed to open at a supersonic speed which helps to slow down the vehicle's entry to the Martian atmosphere at a speed of over 12,000 mph (5.4 Km)

The space agency has released a video of the parachute opening at a supersonic speed during a test done in the NASA's Wallops Flight Facility, Virginia on October 4, 2017. The parachute gave a momentum which was 1.8 times the speed of sound or nearly 1,300 miles an hour and generated nearly 35,000 pounds of drag force, the friction which helps to slow the payload when it was fully inflated.

This was the first parachute test for the Mars 2020 mission which aims to seek signs of ancient Martian life. The mission's parachute-testing series named as the Advanced Supersonic Parachute Inflation Research Experiment (ASPIRE), started with a rocket launch from the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center's Wallops Flight Facility in Wallops Island, Virginia, in October 2017.

The parachute, its deployment mechanism, and high definition test instrumentations including the camera were added to the payload of the 50-foot-tall (17.7 meters) Black Brant IX sounding rocket which was used for the test mission.

The rocket carried the bullet-nosed payload to about 32 miles (51 km), acquired the velocity of the test condition and then successfully deployed the parachute. The ASPIRE fell in the Atlantic Ocean at a distance of about 34 miles (54 Km) to the southeast of Wallops Islands after thirty-five minutes of its launch.

Mars 2020 mission
A 58-foot-tall Black Brant IX sounding rocket launches from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility on Oct. 4. This was the first test of the Mars 2020 mission's parachute-testing series, the Advanced Supersonic Parachute Inflation Research Experiment, or ASPIRE. NASA/Wallops

Ian Clark, the test's technical lead from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said, "It is quite a ride. The imagery of our first parachute inflation is almost as breathtaking to behold as it is scientifically significant."

The parachute used for the test mission was an exact copy of the parachute used in NASA's Mars Science Laboratory which had successfully landed on Martian surface in 2012. It is being strengthened for use in future Mars missions. The next ASPIRE test has been scheduled for February 2018.

The Mars 2020 rover would land in a region which has an ancient Martian environment which would have supported microbial life. It would probe on the Martian rocks and collect samples of the rocks and soil which would be returned to earth for studies. The scientists believe that such studies would unveil evidence of life on the planet as well as help in the studying future health hazards for humans on Mars.

Related topics : Nasa
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