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NASA Perseverance Rover Poses for Delightful Mars Sample Depot Selfie

NASA Perseverance Rover Poses for Delightful Mars Sample Depot Selfie
NASA Perseverance Rover Poses for Delightful Mars Sample Depot Selfie


This story is part of Welcome to Mars, our series exploring the red planet.

NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover has good reason to be proud. It’s completing the very first sample depot on another world by depositing a collection of tubes stuffed with rocks onto the Martian ground. To mark the occasion, the rover snapped a selfie featuring one of its sample tubes.

The rover selfie is made up of multiple images stitched together into a whole. The rover snapped the images on Jan. 22. NASA will likely release an official version of the selfie soon, but image processors have already transformed the rover’s raw images into full selfies.

Amateur Astronomer Stuart Atkinson shared a processed selfie on Monday showing the rover looking down toward the Martian surface.

Engineer Kevin Gill posted his own version of the selfie on Tuesday with Percy’s “head” facing the camera.

Building the depot started in December 2022 and has taken weeks. The depot is laid out in a specific pattern and involves 10 separate tubes that look like little Star Wars lightsaber handles. Most of the tubes contain small, chalk-size samples of Mars rocks collected in the Jezero Crater. 

The depot is a backup plan for the future Mars Sample Return mission, a complex, multistage endeavor that’ll aim to pick up Percy’s samples and bring them back to Earth in the 2030s for closer study. NASA hopes the rover will be in good shape when MSR arrives, so it can deliver the samples itself. If not, then the mission will send a pair of small helicopters to the sample depot site to pick up the tubes left there. Percy has been collecting samples in pairs, so it can drop one and keep the other on board.

The Jezero Crater has an intriguing history of water and is home to an ancient river delta region. Rock samples from the delta area are particularly exciting. Scientists hope they’ll give us insights into whether the red planet once hosted microbial life. 

It’s an exciting time to be a rover on the red planet, and the sample depot project is well worth a Martian selfie celebration. Looking good, Percy.



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