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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,405 --> 00:00:03,338 ♪ 2 00:00:07,271 --> 00:00:11,005 NARRATOR: February 18, 2021. 3 00:00:11,071 --> 00:00:14,271 Perseverance, NASA's newest rover, 4 00:00:14,338 --> 00:00:19,538 {\an1}one of the most sophisticated planetary probes ever built, 5 00:00:19,605 --> 00:00:21,005 {\an1}is approaching Mars 6 00:00:21,071 --> 00:00:26,605 {\an1}on an epic quest to hunt for life beyond Earth. 7 00:00:26,671 --> 00:00:28,071 {\an1}SWATI MOHAN: We are under a minute 8 00:00:28,138 --> 00:00:29,214 {\an1}from cruise stage separation. 9 00:00:29,238 --> 00:00:31,638 NARRATOR: 130 million miles away, 10 00:00:31,705 --> 00:00:33,081 {\an1}a team of researchers anxiously waits... 11 00:00:33,105 --> 00:00:35,005 MOHAN: Heading alignment. 12 00:00:35,071 --> 00:00:38,438 {\an1}NARRATOR: as Perseverance attempts to land 13 00:00:38,505 --> 00:00:41,571 where no rover has dared land before... 14 00:00:41,638 --> 00:00:43,971 Inside a crater 15 00:00:44,038 --> 00:00:47,205 {\an1}that might be filled with ancient Martian life, 16 00:00:47,271 --> 00:00:50,138 {\an1}but is definitely filled with cliffs 17 00:00:50,205 --> 00:00:52,671 and sand traps 18 00:00:52,738 --> 00:00:55,005 {\an1}where a rover can crash 19 00:00:55,071 --> 00:00:56,938 {\an1}or get stuck for good. 20 00:00:57,005 --> 00:00:58,047 AL CHEN: We're heading toward the ground 21 00:00:58,071 --> 00:01:00,238 {\an1}at race car speeds. 22 00:01:00,305 --> 00:01:02,571 {\an1}So there's no way we're going to joystick this down. 23 00:01:02,638 --> 00:01:06,538 {\an1}NARRATOR: For the first time in the history of Mars exploration, 24 00:01:06,605 --> 00:01:08,371 {\an1}a rover is equipped with 25 00:01:08,438 --> 00:01:12,871 {\an1}the intelligence to try to steer itself out of danger. 26 00:01:12,938 --> 00:01:15,571 {\an1}ELIO MORILLO: There's a very specific timeline of events 27 00:01:15,638 --> 00:01:18,338 {\an1}that have to happen at the correct time for 28 00:01:18,405 --> 00:01:21,738 {\an1}the entire process to succeed. 29 00:01:21,805 --> 00:01:23,281 {\an1}NARRATOR: Perseverance signals its progress... 30 00:01:23,305 --> 00:01:24,938 MOHAN: Sky crane maneuver has started. 31 00:01:25,005 --> 00:01:27,905 {\an1}NARRATOR: as the team monitors every step. 32 00:01:27,971 --> 00:01:32,171 {\an1}If the rover manages to land in one piece, 33 00:01:32,238 --> 00:01:36,105 {\an1}for about two years, it will drill into Martian rock 34 00:01:36,171 --> 00:01:39,271 {\an1}that could hold evidence of ancient life, 35 00:01:39,338 --> 00:01:43,238 {\an1}then collect samples and store them. 36 00:01:43,305 --> 00:01:46,638 {\an1}JULIE TOWNSEND: For the first time, we are going to collect 37 00:01:46,705 --> 00:01:48,345 {\an1}rock samples and bring them back to Earth. 38 00:01:49,838 --> 00:01:53,371 {\an7}NARRATOR: In the future, another rover will retrieve the samples 39 00:01:53,438 --> 00:01:55,271 {\an7}Perseverancecollects. 40 00:01:55,338 --> 00:01:57,605 {\an1}And through a series of daring missions... 41 00:01:57,671 --> 00:02:02,738 {\an1}that sound more science fiction than science fact... 42 00:02:02,805 --> 00:02:05,105 {\an1}the samples will be brought to Earth, 43 00:02:05,171 --> 00:02:08,071 {\an1}where researchers can examine them 44 00:02:08,138 --> 00:02:10,605 {\an1}in far greater detail. 45 00:02:10,671 --> 00:02:12,381 KENNDA LYNCH: We have this amazing technology 46 00:02:12,405 --> 00:02:14,605 {\an1}that can really can get those samples, 47 00:02:14,671 --> 00:02:15,738 {\an1}bring them back to Earth, 48 00:02:15,805 --> 00:02:17,147 {\an1}and do all the really cool analysis 49 00:02:17,171 --> 00:02:18,414 {\an1}that we want to do here on Earth. 50 00:02:18,438 --> 00:02:20,938 ♪ 51 00:02:21,005 --> 00:02:23,338 {\an1}This is a very, very large undertaking 52 00:02:23,405 --> 00:02:25,438 {\an1}involving thousands and thousands of people 53 00:02:25,505 --> 00:02:27,138 {\an1}from all over the world. 54 00:02:27,205 --> 00:02:29,771 NARRATOR: Thousands of researchers 55 00:02:29,838 --> 00:02:34,305 {\an1}with one shared goal. 56 00:02:34,371 --> 00:02:39,305 {\an1}"Looking for Life on Mars," right now, on "NOVA." 57 00:02:39,371 --> 00:02:42,171 ♪ 58 00:02:46,505 --> 00:02:51,038 ♪ 59 00:03:02,205 --> 00:03:03,238 ♪ 60 00:03:03,305 --> 00:03:06,538 NARRATOR: Did life ever exist on Mars? 61 00:03:06,605 --> 00:03:12,138 And if it did, what would that mean for us? 62 00:03:12,205 --> 00:03:15,738 {\an1}JENNIFER EIGENBRODE: How special is life on Earth? 63 00:03:15,805 --> 00:03:20,305 {\an1}Why do we not see it on Mars today? 64 00:03:20,371 --> 00:03:22,305 {\an1}Did it ever evolve on Mars? 65 00:03:22,371 --> 00:03:24,505 ♪ 66 00:03:24,571 --> 00:03:26,838 {\an1}What does it take to get life 67 00:03:26,905 --> 00:03:29,138 {\an1}to evolve on a planet? 68 00:03:29,205 --> 00:03:31,238 ♪ 69 00:03:31,305 --> 00:03:32,781 DERRICK PITTS: That question about life 70 00:03:32,805 --> 00:03:37,071 {\an1}is the one that really perplexes and, I think, really drives us. 71 00:03:37,138 --> 00:03:40,038 ♪ 72 00:03:40,105 --> 00:03:44,071 {\an1}Something about our desire to not be alone 73 00:03:44,138 --> 00:03:48,738 {\an1}keeps pushing us forward in the search for life. 74 00:03:53,638 --> 00:03:55,405 {\an7}I like to call it "CSI: Mars," right? 75 00:03:55,471 --> 00:03:57,281 {\an7}You know, it's, it's literally this investigation 76 00:03:57,305 --> 00:03:58,947 {\an7}where you're finding all these little clues 77 00:03:58,971 --> 00:04:00,047 {\an7}to put together your story. 78 00:04:00,071 --> 00:04:02,271 ♪ 79 00:04:02,338 --> 00:04:06,605 {\an1}NARRATOR: The tale of our celestial neighbor, Mars. 80 00:04:06,671 --> 00:04:08,738 The red planet. 81 00:04:08,805 --> 00:04:11,805 {\an1}It captures the imagination. 82 00:04:11,871 --> 00:04:14,871 {\an1}Thousands of images paint a picture 83 00:04:14,938 --> 00:04:17,005 {\an1}of a barren, alien world. 84 00:04:17,071 --> 00:04:20,505 {\an8}♪ 85 00:04:20,571 --> 00:04:24,438 {\an7}At the same time, there's something about Mars 86 00:04:24,505 --> 00:04:27,905 {\an1}that's strangely familiar. 87 00:04:27,971 --> 00:04:30,838 AARON YAZZIE I was born on the Navajo Nation. 88 00:04:30,905 --> 00:04:32,238 {\an7}It's a high desert area 89 00:04:32,305 --> 00:04:33,938 {\an7}that actually has rolling desert hills, 90 00:04:34,005 --> 00:04:38,905 {\an7}canyons, and rock formations, and mountains, 91 00:04:38,971 --> 00:04:41,938 {\an7}and all of that looks like the Martian landscape. 92 00:04:43,938 --> 00:04:46,171 {\an7}DIANA TRUJILLO: When I look at the pictures of Mars, 93 00:04:46,238 --> 00:04:48,838 {\an7}I see the Mojave Desert, right? 94 00:04:48,905 --> 00:04:50,438 {\an7}Without the cactus. 95 00:04:50,505 --> 00:04:52,405 {\an1}But I can't tell the difference if this image 96 00:04:52,471 --> 00:04:55,471 {\an1}is from the Mojave Desert or if this is from Mars. 97 00:04:55,538 --> 00:04:58,105 {\an1}To me, it makes me want to know more. 98 00:04:58,171 --> 00:05:02,071 {\an1}It makes me want to know, you know, what happened to Mars, 99 00:05:02,138 --> 00:05:03,705 {\an1}or was there life there? 100 00:05:03,771 --> 00:05:05,805 {\an8}(whirring) 101 00:05:05,871 --> 00:05:07,581 {\an7}NARRATOR: Can the Perseverance rover finally answer 102 00:05:07,605 --> 00:05:10,505 {\an8}this question? 103 00:05:10,571 --> 00:05:13,805 {\an7}We've been searching for the remnants of life 104 00:05:13,871 --> 00:05:16,071 {\an7}on the red planet for decades, 105 00:05:16,138 --> 00:05:18,705 {\an7}from the Mariner orbiters 106 00:05:18,771 --> 00:05:23,305 {\an7}to the successful landings of Viking 1and2... 107 00:05:25,471 --> 00:05:28,005 {\an7}...through the twin rovers Spiritand Opportunity 108 00:05:28,071 --> 00:05:30,938 {\an7}that crisscrossed the planet. 109 00:05:31,005 --> 00:05:33,271 {\an7}MORILLO: We've been building our knowledge 110 00:05:33,338 --> 00:05:34,938 {\an7}of the Martian environment 111 00:05:35,005 --> 00:05:36,814 {\an7}through so many decades and so many achievements 112 00:05:36,838 --> 00:05:38,305 {\an7}from so many engineers before us. 113 00:05:38,371 --> 00:05:40,738 NARRATOR: But it was the discoveries 114 00:05:40,805 --> 00:05:43,605 {\an1}of the most cunning robotic detective 115 00:05:43,671 --> 00:05:48,138 {\an1}to ever explore Mars, a rover named Curiosity, 116 00:05:48,205 --> 00:05:51,338 {\an1}that set the stage for the Perseverancemission. 117 00:05:51,405 --> 00:05:56,005 {\an1}September 14, 2012, 118 00:05:56,071 --> 00:05:58,771 {\an1}40 days after Curiosity landed on Mars, 119 00:05:58,838 --> 00:06:03,071 {\an1}it stumbled upon the unexpected. 120 00:06:03,138 --> 00:06:05,571 {\an1}SANJEEV GUPTA: I remember the moment those images came down. 121 00:06:05,638 --> 00:06:07,081 {\an1}We were all at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory 122 00:06:07,105 --> 00:06:09,205 {\an7}at the time, and we were all huddled 123 00:06:09,271 --> 00:06:10,538 {\an7}around a giant computer screen, 124 00:06:10,605 --> 00:06:13,205 {\an7}and, and I was just gazing at this in astonishment, 125 00:06:13,271 --> 00:06:16,271 {\an8}because it's not what we had expected. 126 00:06:16,338 --> 00:06:17,814 {\an8}EIGENBRODE: We came across a whole bunch 127 00:06:17,838 --> 00:06:20,305 of cobbles, 128 00:06:20,371 --> 00:06:24,305 {\an1}and when we saw that, everybody's jaw just dropped. 129 00:06:24,371 --> 00:06:28,005 {\an7}"Oh, my gosh, look at this, this is perfect." 130 00:06:28,071 --> 00:06:29,571 {\an7}It is the classic example 131 00:06:29,638 --> 00:06:32,071 {\an7}of a river deposit. 132 00:06:32,138 --> 00:06:36,938 {\an1}Each one of those rocks, they had to get bounced around 133 00:06:37,005 --> 00:06:40,005 {\an1}in some type of environment that was going to turn them 134 00:06:40,071 --> 00:06:43,505 {\an1}from something that was chunky and sharp and angular 135 00:06:43,571 --> 00:06:45,838 {\an1}to something that was rounded. 136 00:06:45,905 --> 00:06:46,838 Rivers do that. 137 00:06:46,905 --> 00:06:51,405 {\an7}Rivers on Earth do that very well. 138 00:06:51,471 --> 00:06:55,838 {\an7}And so when we saw this, it was our first evidence of a river. 139 00:06:55,905 --> 00:06:58,671 NARRATOR: Evidence that water once flowed 140 00:06:58,738 --> 00:07:00,705 {\an1}on the surface of the red planet. 141 00:07:00,771 --> 00:07:05,505 {\an1}On Earth, all life needs water to thrive... 142 00:07:08,205 --> 00:07:10,938 {\an1}...from the giant blue whale 143 00:07:11,005 --> 00:07:14,005 {\an1}to tiny microbes. 144 00:07:14,071 --> 00:07:16,071 {\an1}GUPTA: The scientists on the team have discovered 145 00:07:16,138 --> 00:07:19,338 {\an1}all these telltale signatures in the rocks 146 00:07:19,405 --> 00:07:23,171 {\an1}that there were rivers and ancient lakes that existed 147 00:07:23,238 --> 00:07:26,605 {\an1}for hundreds of thousands, if not millions of years. 148 00:07:26,671 --> 00:07:29,705 HEATHER GRAHAM: You can think of Mars 149 00:07:29,771 --> 00:07:32,871 {\an7}as... back in time, of course... 150 00:07:32,938 --> 00:07:39,405 {\an1}as being Earth's slightly smaller, slightly colder sister. 151 00:07:39,471 --> 00:07:44,371 {\an1}GUPTA: Between 3.9 and 3.5 billion years ago, 152 00:07:44,438 --> 00:07:49,105 {\an1}we think that Mars was a warmer and wetter place. 153 00:07:49,171 --> 00:07:50,338 {\an1}And what's interesting about 154 00:07:50,405 --> 00:07:53,638 {\an1}that is that's the same sort of time interval 155 00:07:53,705 --> 00:07:56,771 {\an1}that life got going on Earth. 156 00:07:58,671 --> 00:08:00,971 {\an1}KEN FARLEY: We have two planets with similar environments 157 00:08:01,038 --> 00:08:02,105 {\an1}at similar times. 158 00:08:02,171 --> 00:08:06,071 {\an7}One of them, on Earth, is inhabited. 159 00:08:06,138 --> 00:08:10,671 {\an7}Why wouldn't we expect that the one on Mars would be inhabited? 160 00:08:10,738 --> 00:08:15,605 {\an1}NARRATOR: Curiosityfound evidence of a once-wet world. 161 00:08:15,671 --> 00:08:20,238 {\an1}But here on Earth, for life to thrive, 162 00:08:20,305 --> 00:08:22,671 {\an1}it needs more than water. 163 00:08:22,738 --> 00:08:24,738 {\an1}It needs nutrients. 164 00:08:24,805 --> 00:08:26,238 EIGENBRODE: We tend to simplify 165 00:08:26,305 --> 00:08:28,571 {\an1}that search for what type of nutrients 166 00:08:28,638 --> 00:08:30,305 {\an1}as what we call CHNOPS. 167 00:08:30,371 --> 00:08:32,738 {\an1}When people say CHNOPS, what they're saying is carbon... 168 00:08:32,805 --> 00:08:34,505 Hydrogen... Nitrogen... 169 00:08:34,571 --> 00:08:35,971 Oxygen... Phosphorus... 170 00:08:36,038 --> 00:08:36,971 Sulfur. 171 00:08:37,038 --> 00:08:39,038 {\an1}And we spell all those, 172 00:08:39,105 --> 00:08:40,571 {\an1}the first letter of all those out, 173 00:08:40,638 --> 00:08:42,371 {\an1}it's called CHNOPS. (laughs) 174 00:08:42,438 --> 00:08:45,405 NARRATOR: These six elements make up 175 00:08:45,471 --> 00:08:49,571 {\an1}roughly 99% of the mass of the human body. 176 00:08:49,638 --> 00:08:53,438 {\an1}In fact, they make up about 99% of the mass 177 00:08:53,505 --> 00:08:56,605 {\an1}of all living things. 178 00:08:56,671 --> 00:09:01,771 {\an1}If life, as we know it, ever existed on Mars, 179 00:09:01,838 --> 00:09:05,438 {\an1}finding CHNOPS was key. 180 00:09:05,505 --> 00:09:11,238 {\an1}Could Curiosity, a laboratory on wheels, find CHNOPS? 181 00:09:12,871 --> 00:09:16,605 {\an1}The rover scooped up samples of Martian soil 182 00:09:16,671 --> 00:09:19,838 {\an1}to decode its chemical composition. 183 00:09:19,905 --> 00:09:22,071 {\an1}EIGENBRODE: What we found was a diverse chemistry 184 00:09:22,138 --> 00:09:25,038 {\an1}that included carbon, hydrogen, 185 00:09:25,105 --> 00:09:28,605 {\an7}some nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur, 186 00:09:28,671 --> 00:09:30,505 {\an7}and eventually we found some phosphorus. 187 00:09:30,571 --> 00:09:35,438 {\an1}There's plenty of chemical energy available for life, 188 00:09:35,505 --> 00:09:37,538 {\an1}if it had ever lived there. 189 00:09:37,605 --> 00:09:39,371 {\an1}That's really been the big discovery 190 00:09:39,438 --> 00:09:41,638 {\an1}of the Curiosityrover mission. 191 00:09:41,705 --> 00:09:43,838 ♪ 192 00:09:43,905 --> 00:09:49,338 {\an1}NARRATOR: Curiosity found the ingredients necessary for life 193 00:09:49,405 --> 00:09:51,705 {\an1}to emerge, but not life itself. 194 00:09:51,771 --> 00:09:54,571 {\an1}FARLEY: Curiosity has not, in fact, detected evidence 195 00:09:54,638 --> 00:09:56,971 {\an1}for life, because it does not have the instruments 196 00:09:57,038 --> 00:09:58,371 {\an1}designed for that purpose. 197 00:10:01,871 --> 00:10:04,905 {\an1}NARRATOR: Perseveranceis designed to take the next step 198 00:10:04,971 --> 00:10:07,538 {\an1}in Mars exploration, 199 00:10:07,605 --> 00:10:10,438 {\an1}as it ventures into unexplored territory 200 00:10:10,505 --> 00:10:13,871 {\an1}to search for samples of Martian rock 201 00:10:13,938 --> 00:10:17,105 {\an1}in Jezero Crater. 202 00:10:17,171 --> 00:10:18,381 {\an7}If you want to set yourself up for success 203 00:10:18,405 --> 00:10:20,871 {\an7}for finding ancient life, that is the place to go. 204 00:10:20,938 --> 00:10:22,271 ♪ 205 00:10:22,338 --> 00:10:24,671 NARRATOR: This orbital image reveals 206 00:10:24,738 --> 00:10:29,538 {\an1}what makes Jezero Crater so intriguing. 207 00:10:29,605 --> 00:10:31,738 {\an1}KEN WILLIFORD: The key thing that led us to Jezero 208 00:10:31,805 --> 00:10:35,938 {\an1}was this beautiful delta, beautifully visible from orbit. 209 00:10:36,005 --> 00:10:39,205 {\an1}We think that delta must be somewhere around 210 00:10:39,271 --> 00:10:41,271 {\an1}three billion years old or older. 211 00:10:44,138 --> 00:10:47,605 {\an1}This delta sits at the end of a beautifully expressed 212 00:10:47,671 --> 00:10:51,305 {\an1}sinuous river channel that came in from the northwest, 213 00:10:51,371 --> 00:10:54,471 {\an7}flowing into the crater rim, and filling up 214 00:10:54,538 --> 00:10:57,138 {\an1}Jezero Crater with a lake. 215 00:10:59,671 --> 00:11:02,438 {\an1}NARRATOR: On Earth, deltas form where a river 216 00:11:02,505 --> 00:11:05,638 {\an1}and a larger body of water meet. 217 00:11:05,705 --> 00:11:11,371 {\an1}Sediment, brought in from the river, drifts to the bottom. 218 00:11:11,438 --> 00:11:12,638 TANJA BOSAK: The sediments that 219 00:11:12,705 --> 00:11:15,271 {\an7}the river carries are... 220 00:11:15,338 --> 00:11:17,871 {\an7}They really just fall out and they settle down. 221 00:11:17,938 --> 00:11:20,438 ♪ 222 00:11:20,505 --> 00:11:22,425 {\an1}EIGENBRODE: It creates a mud layer at the bottom. 223 00:11:22,471 --> 00:11:26,171 {\an1}Year after year after year after year, it creates these. 224 00:11:27,871 --> 00:11:30,971 {\an7}NARRATOR: Take some of that earthly delta mud, 225 00:11:31,038 --> 00:11:32,971 {\an7}put it under a microscope, 226 00:11:33,038 --> 00:11:35,571 {\an8}and you'll find it's teeming with life. 227 00:11:37,271 --> 00:11:38,671 Tiny microbes, 228 00:11:38,738 --> 00:11:42,905 {\an1}among the most ancient forms of life on Earth, 229 00:11:42,971 --> 00:11:47,205 {\an1}arising billions of years before the dinosaurs... 230 00:11:47,271 --> 00:11:50,038 {\an1}and far more resilient. 231 00:11:50,105 --> 00:11:54,005 {\an1}BOSAK: If we think about Mars billions of years ago, 232 00:11:54,071 --> 00:11:58,271 {\an1}we cannot hope for any large-scale fossils. 233 00:11:58,338 --> 00:12:01,671 {\an1}We can't really hope for fossil bones. 234 00:12:01,738 --> 00:12:05,038 {\an1}We can't hope for petrified wood. 235 00:12:05,105 --> 00:12:08,638 {\an1}We can't hope for fossilized leaves, 236 00:12:08,705 --> 00:12:12,038 {\an1}because none of that life existed even on Earth 237 00:12:12,105 --> 00:12:15,805 {\an1}before maybe half-a-billion years ago. 238 00:12:15,871 --> 00:12:17,738 {\an1}The only life that we can hope for 239 00:12:17,805 --> 00:12:20,871 {\an1}on this old, ancient Mars is microbial. 240 00:12:20,938 --> 00:12:23,871 {\an1}Now, this is where it gets tricky, 241 00:12:23,938 --> 00:12:25,338 {\an1}because microbes are tiny. 242 00:12:25,405 --> 00:12:28,105 {\an1}That's what their name says, they're microscopic. 243 00:12:28,171 --> 00:12:31,271 {\an1}And we can't really take microscopes to Mars, 244 00:12:31,338 --> 00:12:33,471 {\an1}but what we can look for are rocks 245 00:12:33,538 --> 00:12:35,671 {\an1}that can be shaped by microbial processes. 246 00:12:35,738 --> 00:12:38,638 NARRATOR: And that's what the team 247 00:12:38,705 --> 00:12:41,271 {\an1}hopes Perseverancewill find: 248 00:12:41,338 --> 00:12:45,571 {\an1}fossilized microbes, buried in the ancient rocks 249 00:12:45,638 --> 00:12:48,405 {\an1}of Jezero Crater. 250 00:12:48,471 --> 00:12:50,605 {\an1}FARLEY: There are a lot of very interesting debates 251 00:12:50,671 --> 00:12:53,571 {\an1}among the members of the science team 252 00:12:53,638 --> 00:12:56,338 {\an1}trying to figure out, which rocks should we sample? 253 00:12:56,405 --> 00:12:59,771 {\an1}What should we be looking for? 254 00:12:59,838 --> 00:13:01,071 (camera clicks) 255 00:13:01,138 --> 00:13:02,638 And we have 256 00:13:02,705 --> 00:13:05,805 {\an1}one example, only one example, and that's Earth. 257 00:13:05,871 --> 00:13:07,338 ♪ 258 00:13:07,405 --> 00:13:09,938 {\an1}NARRATOR: So the Perseverance science team set out 259 00:13:10,005 --> 00:13:12,371 {\an1}to study the clues Earth has to offer 260 00:13:12,438 --> 00:13:15,738 {\an1}in rocks about the same age 261 00:13:15,805 --> 00:13:19,105 {\an1}as the ones they will search for in Jezero Crater. 262 00:13:19,171 --> 00:13:21,571 FARLEY: We went to this location 263 00:13:21,638 --> 00:13:24,905 {\an1}in Western Australia where the oldest evidence of life occurs, 264 00:13:24,971 --> 00:13:27,571 {\an1}just so we could see what it actually looks like. 265 00:13:27,638 --> 00:13:29,705 {\an1}MAN: There are ripples around the side of... 266 00:13:29,771 --> 00:13:32,405 {\an1}NARRATOR: The strange, rippled layers of these rocks, 267 00:13:32,471 --> 00:13:34,971 {\an1}known as stromatolites, 268 00:13:35,038 --> 00:13:37,438 {\an1}are actually the remnants of a form 269 00:13:37,505 --> 00:13:39,871 {\an1}of ancient microbial life. 270 00:13:42,171 --> 00:13:44,571 {\an1}In a stromatolite, you'll see there's lots of convolutions. 271 00:13:44,638 --> 00:13:48,005 {\an1}They're bumpy and, and lumpy. 272 00:13:48,071 --> 00:13:52,771 {\an1}NARRATOR: Bumps and lumps of fossilized microbes. 273 00:13:52,838 --> 00:13:55,905 {\an1}A fossilized community of organisms all packaged together. 274 00:13:55,971 --> 00:13:58,738 NARRATOR: There are just a few colonies 275 00:13:58,805 --> 00:14:01,705 {\an1}of living stromatolites left on Earth. 276 00:14:01,771 --> 00:14:04,171 {\an1}They look like rocks, 277 00:14:04,238 --> 00:14:08,938 {\an1}but just beneath the surface are layers of bacteria. 278 00:14:09,005 --> 00:14:11,305 {\an1}WILLIFORD: These often form in shallow-water environments 279 00:14:11,371 --> 00:14:12,905 {\an1}where the microbes sort of 280 00:14:12,971 --> 00:14:17,205 {\an1}have something to live on, and they pile up in these layers, 281 00:14:17,271 --> 00:14:20,038 {\an1}one on top of the other, a layer of gooey microbes, 282 00:14:20,105 --> 00:14:22,838 {\an1}bacterial cells that have this sort of mucous-y, 283 00:14:22,905 --> 00:14:24,305 gooey substance. 284 00:14:24,371 --> 00:14:25,971 {\an1}That gooey substance 285 00:14:26,038 --> 00:14:30,038 {\an1}traps sediment, mud or sand, that flows on top of it. 286 00:14:30,105 --> 00:14:31,581 {\an1}And then they grow on top of that again. 287 00:14:31,605 --> 00:14:32,971 {\an1}And that process repeats. 288 00:14:33,038 --> 00:14:35,438 NARRATOR: By studying these 289 00:14:35,505 --> 00:14:37,438 {\an1}ancient stromatolites, 290 00:14:37,505 --> 00:14:40,205 {\an1}the team hopes to gain a deeper understanding 291 00:14:40,271 --> 00:14:43,271 {\an1}of what to hunt for on Mars. 292 00:14:43,338 --> 00:14:45,838 When we went out and looked at these rocks, 293 00:14:45,905 --> 00:14:48,771 {\an1}I was very surprised how obvious it was 294 00:14:48,838 --> 00:14:51,505 {\an1}that the structures that we were looking at were, first of all, 295 00:14:51,571 --> 00:14:53,771 {\an1}very unusual and very likely 296 00:14:53,838 --> 00:14:56,305 to be biogenic, produced by life. 297 00:14:56,371 --> 00:14:59,038 {\an1}This is a kind of a feature 298 00:14:59,105 --> 00:15:02,371 {\an1}that we could see in Jezero Crater with the cameras 299 00:15:02,438 --> 00:15:07,238 {\an1}that we are carrying with us on the Perseverancerover. 300 00:15:07,305 --> 00:15:09,171 {\an7}This rover has a ton of cameras... 301 00:15:09,238 --> 00:15:10,471 {\an7}we are carrying 23 cameras. 302 00:15:10,538 --> 00:15:12,605 ♪ 303 00:15:12,671 --> 00:15:15,371 {\an1}Color cameras, zoom cameras, 304 00:15:15,438 --> 00:15:17,871 {\an1}black-and-white cameras... You name it, right? 305 00:15:17,938 --> 00:15:19,218 {\an1}Cameras that can see up to, like, 306 00:15:19,271 --> 00:15:22,305 {\an1}the size of a grain of salt, and so 307 00:15:22,371 --> 00:15:24,147 they're all over the place on the rover, right? 308 00:15:24,171 --> 00:15:28,805 {\an1}On the front, on the back, on the top, on the arm. 309 00:15:28,871 --> 00:15:31,471 {\an1}We have two in the robotic arm that are awesome. 310 00:15:31,538 --> 00:15:33,471 {\an1}One of them is Pixl and the other one, 311 00:15:33,538 --> 00:15:36,305 {\an1}which I love the name, is Sherloc and Watson. 312 00:15:36,371 --> 00:15:37,471 {\an1}You can guess from the name 313 00:15:37,538 --> 00:15:39,805 {\an1}of Sherloc and Watson that the whole point 314 00:15:39,871 --> 00:15:42,338 {\an1}of those instrument is to investigate, right? 315 00:15:42,405 --> 00:15:46,071 {\an1}What is the chemical composition of that target? 316 00:15:46,138 --> 00:15:48,705 BOSAK: We don't have geologists 317 00:15:48,771 --> 00:15:50,538 {\an1}who can bang their hammers on the rocks 318 00:15:50,605 --> 00:15:53,071 {\an1}or, or take their lenses, or maybe there's even, 319 00:15:53,138 --> 00:15:55,481 {\an1}you could drop some vinegar to see what minerals are present... 320 00:15:55,505 --> 00:15:57,071 {\an1}we can't do that. 321 00:15:57,138 --> 00:15:59,071 {\an1}But we do have a lot of instruments that tell us 322 00:15:59,138 --> 00:16:01,171 {\an1}what is in those rocks. 323 00:16:02,871 --> 00:16:05,005 {\an1}NARRATOR: Perseverancewill also be on the lookout 324 00:16:05,071 --> 00:16:08,505 {\an1}for another ancient rock in Jezero Crater, 325 00:16:08,571 --> 00:16:13,005 {\an1}one that is as elusive as it is appealing. 326 00:16:13,071 --> 00:16:17,238 {\an1}WILLIFORD: This is a piece of what we would call black chert. 327 00:16:17,305 --> 00:16:18,447 {\an1}Chert is such a fine-grained rock. 328 00:16:18,471 --> 00:16:21,105 {\an1}If you look really close, 329 00:16:21,171 --> 00:16:23,971 {\an1}you can see some sort of blotchy, black stuff 330 00:16:24,038 --> 00:16:26,371 {\an1}in the interior of this gray rock. 331 00:16:26,438 --> 00:16:29,071 {\an1}And that black stuff, that blotchy, black stuff 332 00:16:29,138 --> 00:16:33,805 {\an1}is actual fossilized bacterial cells. 333 00:16:33,871 --> 00:16:36,038 {\an1}This is a type of rock that we would 334 00:16:36,105 --> 00:16:38,438 {\an1}absolutely love to encounter on Mars. 335 00:16:38,505 --> 00:16:43,771 {\an1}The tough part is that chert is very, very, very hard to drill. 336 00:16:43,838 --> 00:16:45,338 {\an1}So it'll be a tough decision. 337 00:16:45,405 --> 00:16:47,605 {\an1}If we see a rock like this, we would, 338 00:16:47,671 --> 00:16:49,038 {\an1}we would probably be willing 339 00:16:49,105 --> 00:16:51,238 {\an1}to give up an entire drill bit. 340 00:16:51,305 --> 00:16:52,905 {\an1}The payoff is potentially so huge, 341 00:16:52,971 --> 00:16:54,305 {\an1}because we could, you know, 342 00:16:54,371 --> 00:16:57,138 {\an1}maybe bring back fossil Martian cells. 343 00:16:57,205 --> 00:16:58,938 ♪ 344 00:16:59,005 --> 00:17:02,705 {\an1}NARRATOR: Even if Perseverance finds rocks that look promising, 345 00:17:02,771 --> 00:17:07,338 {\an1}it's not equipped to verify ancient microbes. 346 00:17:07,405 --> 00:17:09,905 {\an1}For that, the Martian rock would need 347 00:17:09,971 --> 00:17:13,071 {\an1}to be studied back on Earth. 348 00:17:13,138 --> 00:17:15,047 {\an7}Collecting samples on Mars and bringing them back to Earth 349 00:17:15,071 --> 00:17:16,447 {\an7}is one of the most complex things we've tried to do 350 00:17:16,471 --> 00:17:18,805 {\an7}with one of our robots... This is a sample tube, 351 00:17:18,871 --> 00:17:22,338 {\an1}and on board Perseverance are over 40 of these. 352 00:17:22,405 --> 00:17:25,338 {\an1}And the goal is to fill each one of them 353 00:17:25,405 --> 00:17:26,871 {\an1}with a sample of Mars rock. 354 00:17:28,371 --> 00:17:30,971 {\an1}NARRATOR: A sample tube is loaded inside a drill 355 00:17:31,038 --> 00:17:33,938 {\an1}at the end of the rover's arm. 356 00:17:34,005 --> 00:17:36,705 {\an7}YAZZIE: We had to come up with an entirely unique design 357 00:17:36,771 --> 00:17:38,771 {\an7}to drill into a lot of different rocks 358 00:17:38,838 --> 00:17:41,271 {\an7}and be able to extract core samples that aren't broken 359 00:17:41,338 --> 00:17:44,138 {\an7}into too many pieces, that hasn't turned into powder. 360 00:17:44,205 --> 00:17:46,505 {\an7}So it's actually a very sophisticated mechanism. 361 00:17:46,571 --> 00:17:50,571 {\an7}After we're done drilling the depth that we want to, 362 00:17:50,638 --> 00:17:53,371 {\an7}we do one final motion to extract the core 363 00:17:53,438 --> 00:17:54,838 {\an7}from the inside of the rock. 364 00:17:54,905 --> 00:17:56,738 ♪ 365 00:17:56,805 --> 00:18:00,371 {\an1}NARRATOR: Now the sample tube, filled with Martian rock, 366 00:18:00,438 --> 00:18:03,405 {\an1}is brought back on board the rover. 367 00:18:03,471 --> 00:18:04,405 JESSICA SAMUELS: We take the robotic arm 368 00:18:04,471 --> 00:18:06,338 {\an1}with Martian sample inside of it 369 00:18:06,405 --> 00:18:09,538 {\an1}and we dock it inside the belly of the rover. 370 00:18:09,605 --> 00:18:12,171 (whirring) 371 00:18:12,238 --> 00:18:14,538 {\an1}Where we have another small robotic arm 372 00:18:14,605 --> 00:18:15,971 {\an1}that extracts the tube... 373 00:18:16,038 --> 00:18:17,905 (whirring) 374 00:18:17,971 --> 00:18:22,338 {\an1}...and takes it through a series of stations. 375 00:18:22,405 --> 00:18:24,838 SAMUELS: We want to inspect it. 376 00:18:24,905 --> 00:18:27,938 {\an7}We want to figure out how much volume we may have collected, 377 00:18:28,005 --> 00:18:29,771 {\an7}take some pictures of it. 378 00:18:29,838 --> 00:18:32,238 {\an1}And then we seal that tube 379 00:18:32,305 --> 00:18:35,671 {\an1}and then go put it back into our storage rack. 380 00:18:35,738 --> 00:18:38,238 {\an1}TRUJILLO: So all of that gets done internal to the belly 381 00:18:38,305 --> 00:18:40,205 {\an1}of the rover with a little arm 382 00:18:40,271 --> 00:18:42,205 {\an1}that, he's moving it around, which is insane. 383 00:18:43,738 --> 00:18:45,005 NARRATOR: It took seven years 384 00:18:45,071 --> 00:18:48,638 {\an1}to design, test, and build 385 00:18:48,705 --> 00:18:51,338 {\an1}this one-of-a-kind sampling system. 386 00:18:51,405 --> 00:18:53,171 TOWNSEND: We've put a lot into this rover, 387 00:18:53,238 --> 00:18:55,705 {\an1}and we are very invested in it working 388 00:18:55,771 --> 00:18:57,605 {\an1}when it gets to Mars. 389 00:18:57,671 --> 00:18:59,338 {\an1}And so we kind of wait 390 00:18:59,405 --> 00:19:01,505 {\an1}with bated breath, and we do the best we can, 391 00:19:01,571 --> 00:19:03,505 {\an1}and we do tons and tons of testing. 392 00:19:03,571 --> 00:19:06,171 {\an1}And we, we hope that it is enough. 393 00:19:06,238 --> 00:19:09,138 ♪ 394 00:19:09,205 --> 00:19:12,238 {\an1}NARRATOR: Inside this massive clean room at JPL, 395 00:19:12,305 --> 00:19:14,738 {\an1}the sampling system, 396 00:19:14,805 --> 00:19:16,671 {\an1}along with seven science instruments, 397 00:19:16,738 --> 00:19:21,338 {\an1}are carefully loaded inside the S.U.V.-size rover. 398 00:19:21,405 --> 00:19:23,538 {\an1}Throughout this process, 399 00:19:23,605 --> 00:19:26,305 {\an1}the spacecraft must be kept impeccably clean, 400 00:19:26,371 --> 00:19:29,538 {\an7}down to the microbe. 401 00:19:29,605 --> 00:19:30,771 {\an8}LYNCH: We don't want to send 402 00:19:30,838 --> 00:19:33,105 {\an7}an expensive vehicle like Perseverance 403 00:19:33,171 --> 00:19:35,538 {\an7}to Mars and then just detect ourselves, 404 00:19:35,605 --> 00:19:37,771 {\an7}because we didn't work to make sure that 405 00:19:37,838 --> 00:19:40,671 {\an7}we kept the spacecraft and the instruments, 406 00:19:40,738 --> 00:19:42,871 {\an7}and everything that it touches, as clean as possible. 407 00:19:42,938 --> 00:19:44,771 {\an8}COOPER: You want to have 408 00:19:44,838 --> 00:19:47,905 {\an7}a nice pristine sample without any Earth contamination, 409 00:19:47,971 --> 00:19:48,981 {\an7}so that's why we work really hard 410 00:19:49,005 --> 00:19:51,938 {\an1}to keep that spacecraft clean. 411 00:19:52,005 --> 00:19:54,838 NARRATOR: Moogega Cooper is responsible 412 00:19:54,905 --> 00:19:58,438 {\an1}for hunting down earthly microbes that could hitch a ride 413 00:19:58,505 --> 00:20:00,738 {\an1}to Mars on the spacecraft. 414 00:20:00,805 --> 00:20:03,805 {\an1}Especially the hardy ones. 415 00:20:03,871 --> 00:20:05,805 {\an1}COOPER: The microbes that we're talking about are 416 00:20:05,871 --> 00:20:09,071 {\an1}so resilient, they could possibly survive all of the 417 00:20:09,138 --> 00:20:14,405 {\an1}radiation in space, U.V., the temperature swings, 418 00:20:14,471 --> 00:20:15,838 {\an1}journeying to Mars, 419 00:20:15,905 --> 00:20:18,838 {\an1}and possibly back. 420 00:20:18,905 --> 00:20:20,638 {\an1}So we have to sample the hardware over time, 421 00:20:20,705 --> 00:20:21,971 {\an1}and we use either swabs 422 00:20:22,038 --> 00:20:25,371 {\an1}or wipes to collect samples, 423 00:20:25,438 --> 00:20:27,481 {\an1}lift them off of the surface, and we bring it to our lab 424 00:20:27,505 --> 00:20:29,738 {\an1}and we put them in these petri dishes. 425 00:20:29,805 --> 00:20:31,171 {\an1}We have to give them food 426 00:20:31,238 --> 00:20:33,571 {\an1}so that the colonies grow large enough so that 427 00:20:33,638 --> 00:20:36,038 {\an1}we can see them, and know that they're present 428 00:20:36,105 --> 00:20:37,471 {\an1}on our petri dish. 429 00:20:37,538 --> 00:20:40,705 NARRATOR: If some hardy microbes flourish, 430 00:20:40,771 --> 00:20:44,171 {\an7}the surface is cleaned with isopropyl alcohol. 431 00:20:44,238 --> 00:20:46,105 COOPER: Over the course of the mission, 432 00:20:46,171 --> 00:20:50,971 {\an1}we've taken 16,681 wipes, swabs, and air samples 433 00:20:51,038 --> 00:20:54,471 {\an1}of the spacecraft and the surrounding environment. 434 00:20:54,538 --> 00:20:56,071 {\an1}Pretty... Pretty good job. 435 00:20:58,005 --> 00:20:59,685 {\an1}NARRATOR: But there's one part of the rover 436 00:20:59,738 --> 00:21:02,771 {\an1}that needs to be as clean as humanly possible. 437 00:21:04,638 --> 00:21:08,171 {\an1}The sample tubes that will store Martian rock. 438 00:21:10,205 --> 00:21:11,765 IAN CLARK: We had to have an environment 439 00:21:11,805 --> 00:21:13,705 {\an7}in which to put them together 440 00:21:13,771 --> 00:21:15,805 {\an7}and to handle them and to work with them 441 00:21:15,871 --> 00:21:18,038 {\an1}and assemble them. 442 00:21:18,105 --> 00:21:21,905 {\an1}We built an entirely new clean room, 443 00:21:21,971 --> 00:21:24,471 {\an1}the cleanest environments we've ever had at JPL. 444 00:21:24,538 --> 00:21:26,071 {\an1}We take a normal clean room 445 00:21:26,138 --> 00:21:27,771 {\an1}and we start breaking everything down 446 00:21:27,838 --> 00:21:30,138 {\an1}to understand additional sources of contamination 447 00:21:30,205 --> 00:21:32,905 {\an1}and how do we make that room even cleaner. 448 00:21:32,971 --> 00:21:35,105 {\an1}The gloves that they use, 449 00:21:35,171 --> 00:21:37,105 {\an1}how many layers of gloves that they have, 450 00:21:37,171 --> 00:21:39,405 {\an1}how often they need to change gloves, 451 00:21:39,471 --> 00:21:41,305 {\an1}how often they have to change the gowns, 452 00:21:41,371 --> 00:21:42,871 {\an1}when we can reuse things. 453 00:21:42,938 --> 00:21:46,271 {\an1}Even the computers that are used in there. 454 00:21:46,338 --> 00:21:48,238 We can't bring cell phones into that room. 455 00:21:48,305 --> 00:21:50,438 {\an1}We can't bring everyday objects 456 00:21:50,505 --> 00:21:53,371 {\an1}that you normally associate with how you do your job 457 00:21:53,438 --> 00:21:56,871 {\an1}into an environment that is that sterile and that clean. 458 00:21:56,938 --> 00:22:02,471 {\an1}The sample tube itself looks very similar to a test tube, 459 00:22:02,538 --> 00:22:07,038 {\an7}but that really belies the complexity of the design 460 00:22:07,105 --> 00:22:09,145 {\an7}and the features that are built into the sample tube 461 00:22:09,205 --> 00:22:11,371 {\an7}to help prevent contamination. 462 00:22:11,438 --> 00:22:15,205 {\an1}The gold coating is a mixture of titanium and nitrogen 463 00:22:15,271 --> 00:22:18,471 {\an1}especially engineered in order to prevent organic compounds 464 00:22:18,538 --> 00:22:22,005 {\an7}from sticking to the surface, and that's on the outside 465 00:22:22,071 --> 00:22:24,571 {\an1}of the sample tube and also inside the sample tube. 466 00:22:24,638 --> 00:22:26,871 ♪ 467 00:22:26,938 --> 00:22:28,638 {\an1}These sample tubes are the cleanest things 468 00:22:28,705 --> 00:22:29,938 {\an1}that we've ever sent 469 00:22:30,005 --> 00:22:31,471 {\an1}to another planet by far. 470 00:22:31,538 --> 00:22:34,938 {\an1}In fact, these sample tubes are probably 471 00:22:35,005 --> 00:22:36,571 {\an1}the cleanest thing on Earth. 472 00:22:41,138 --> 00:22:43,105 ♪ 473 00:22:43,171 --> 00:22:45,705 NARRATOR: March 2020. 474 00:22:45,771 --> 00:22:48,905 {\an1}The COVID-19 pandemic triggers 475 00:22:48,971 --> 00:22:53,138 {\an1}shutdowns across the country... 476 00:22:53,205 --> 00:22:56,905 {\an1}including at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. 477 00:22:56,971 --> 00:23:01,638 {\an1}Life as we know it comes to a grinding halt. 478 00:23:01,705 --> 00:23:04,105 {\an1}COOPER: It's hard enough to build spacecraft, but on top of 479 00:23:04,171 --> 00:23:06,105 {\an1}that, as we were approaching launch, 480 00:23:06,171 --> 00:23:09,305 {\an1}the COVID-19 pandemic was surging in parallel. 481 00:23:09,371 --> 00:23:12,605 NARRATOR: Time is of the essence. 482 00:23:12,671 --> 00:23:15,838 {\an1}It's just four months before launch. 483 00:23:15,905 --> 00:23:18,105 {\an1}A limited number of essential workers 484 00:23:18,171 --> 00:23:20,538 {\an1}are permitted on site. 485 00:23:20,605 --> 00:23:21,871 COOPER: It's very difficult 486 00:23:21,938 --> 00:23:25,271 {\an1}to control whether or not face masks are worn 487 00:23:25,338 --> 00:23:28,405 {\an1}outside of the workplace environment. 488 00:23:28,471 --> 00:23:30,747 {\an1}It's easy when you're in a clean room, that's what you do. 489 00:23:30,771 --> 00:23:32,905 {\an1}You wear your face masks, you wear your bunny suits. 490 00:23:32,971 --> 00:23:36,305 {\an1}We actually felt safer in the clean room than we did 491 00:23:36,371 --> 00:23:39,171 {\an1}in the regular environment. 492 00:23:39,238 --> 00:23:41,838 NARRATOR: Despite the team's best efforts, 493 00:23:41,905 --> 00:23:43,538 {\an1}it's unclear whether they'll be 494 00:23:43,605 --> 00:23:45,738 {\an1}ready to launch on time. 495 00:23:45,805 --> 00:23:47,471 SAMUELS: We launch to Mars 496 00:23:47,538 --> 00:23:49,171 {\an1}typically every two years. 497 00:23:49,238 --> 00:23:53,138 {\an1}And if we miss that opportunity, 498 00:23:53,205 --> 00:23:55,005 you know, that, that's a long time to wait. 499 00:23:56,671 --> 00:23:59,171 {\an1}YAZZIE: One thing to understand about sending something to Mars 500 00:23:59,238 --> 00:24:03,605 {\an1}is that we have a very short launch window. 501 00:24:03,671 --> 00:24:07,705 {\an1}Mars takes about two Earth years to orbit the Sun, 502 00:24:07,771 --> 00:24:11,671 {\an7}and every two years, Mars and the Earth are close enough 503 00:24:11,738 --> 00:24:14,071 {\an7}to each other, and that's when we launch missions 504 00:24:14,138 --> 00:24:16,171 {\an7}between the two planets. 505 00:24:16,238 --> 00:24:18,071 {\an7}And if we miss this launch window 506 00:24:18,138 --> 00:24:20,105 {\an1}for any reason, we would have to wait two years 507 00:24:20,171 --> 00:24:21,905 {\an1}until we could try again. 508 00:24:23,505 --> 00:24:27,905 {\an1}NARRATOR: And that wait could cost half-a-billion dollars. 509 00:24:27,971 --> 00:24:30,005 TRUJILLO: The team recognized 510 00:24:30,071 --> 00:24:31,214 {\an1}we are already on the rails, right? 511 00:24:31,238 --> 00:24:32,738 {\an1}We're about to take off. 512 00:24:32,805 --> 00:24:34,305 {\an1}Let's just get the job done. 513 00:24:34,371 --> 00:24:36,138 {\an1}If we focus on this target, 514 00:24:36,205 --> 00:24:38,305 {\an1}maybe we'll unite the whole team, as well. 515 00:24:38,371 --> 00:24:41,705 {\an1}And in a way, also give hope to everybody, 516 00:24:41,771 --> 00:24:44,305 {\an1}not only on the U.S., but also around the world, that 517 00:24:44,371 --> 00:24:47,005 {\an7}we still can manage to focus on a mission 518 00:24:47,071 --> 00:24:49,671 {\an7}and focus on a bigger objective, and then pull it off. 519 00:24:49,738 --> 00:24:52,005 ♪ 520 00:24:52,071 --> 00:24:54,371 FARLEY: For me, the bright spot 521 00:24:54,438 --> 00:24:59,738 {\an7}of COVID was actually seeing the team that we had pull together 522 00:24:59,805 --> 00:25:02,005 {\an1}and actually get it done. 523 00:25:02,071 --> 00:25:06,705 {\an1}It's kind of miraculous that we got to the launch pad. 524 00:25:06,771 --> 00:25:08,971 NARRATOR: Before Perseverance is launched, 525 00:25:09,038 --> 00:25:12,371 {\an1}members of the team install this plaque 526 00:25:12,438 --> 00:25:15,038 {\an1}to honor healthcare workers. 527 00:25:15,105 --> 00:25:16,514 MORILLO: It's a constant reminder that 528 00:25:16,538 --> 00:25:19,905 {\an7}there are people, you know, making sacrifices to make sure 529 00:25:19,971 --> 00:25:21,671 {\an7}everybody is safe and healthy. 530 00:25:21,738 --> 00:25:24,338 {\an8}♪ 531 00:25:24,405 --> 00:25:27,005 {\an8}NASA ANNOUNCER: From America's shore 532 00:25:27,071 --> 00:25:28,971 {\an7}to Jezero Crater on Mars. 533 00:25:29,038 --> 00:25:30,871 {\an7}We'll begin with the launch of this 534 00:25:30,938 --> 00:25:32,505 {\an7}Atlas V rocket... 535 00:25:32,571 --> 00:25:34,838 {\an8}NARRATOR: The day has finally arrived. 536 00:25:34,905 --> 00:25:38,271 {\an8}Perseverance is on the launch pad. 537 00:25:38,338 --> 00:25:41,738 {\an7}On a nearby beach, team member 538 00:25:41,805 --> 00:25:42,738 {\an8}Elio Morillo, 539 00:25:42,805 --> 00:25:44,205 {\an7}along with friends 540 00:25:44,271 --> 00:25:47,338 {\an7}and his mom, have come to watch the launch. 541 00:25:47,405 --> 00:25:49,905 {\an8}MORILLO: This is my first mission, 542 00:25:49,971 --> 00:25:51,771 {\an7}and I'm about to see it take off to Mars. 543 00:25:51,838 --> 00:25:54,638 {\an1}I can't describe how 544 00:25:54,705 --> 00:25:57,138 {\an1}excited and scared and nervous 545 00:25:57,205 --> 00:25:59,071 {\an1}I am at the same time. 546 00:25:59,138 --> 00:26:01,171 {\an1}I'm really proud to be part of this team. 547 00:26:01,238 --> 00:26:02,305 {\an1}And despite the pandemic, 548 00:26:02,371 --> 00:26:05,605 {\an1}we have persevered through this together. 549 00:26:07,305 --> 00:26:10,038 NARRATOR: Meanwhile... 550 00:26:10,105 --> 00:26:11,805 {\an1}Grabbed my security blanket. 551 00:26:11,871 --> 00:26:13,305 {\an1}Let's see if she'll let me... 552 00:26:13,371 --> 00:26:15,638 {\an1}NARRATOR: Other team members, like Ian Clark, 553 00:26:15,705 --> 00:26:17,938 {\an1}along with his dog Pixl, 554 00:26:18,005 --> 00:26:20,805 {\an1}nervously watch the launch from home. 555 00:26:20,871 --> 00:26:22,231 {\an1}MAN (on computer): Launch director. 556 00:26:22,271 --> 00:26:24,738 {\an1}LD is go, and you have permission to launch. 557 00:26:24,805 --> 00:26:26,905 {\an1}The bouncing in my leg is accelerating 558 00:26:26,971 --> 00:26:29,771 {\an1}as we're getting closer. (chuckles) 559 00:26:29,838 --> 00:26:33,205 {\an1}(chatter on computer) 560 00:26:33,271 --> 00:26:36,438 28 seconds, 28 seconds to launch. 561 00:26:36,505 --> 00:26:38,471 NASA ANNOUNCER: Eight, 562 00:26:38,538 --> 00:26:43,738 {\an1}seven, six, five, four, engine ignition, two... 563 00:26:43,805 --> 00:26:44,805 WOMAN: Zero. 564 00:26:45,971 --> 00:26:48,271 NASA ANNOUNCER: Release... and lift off. 565 00:26:48,338 --> 00:26:51,038 ♪ 566 00:26:51,105 --> 00:26:53,671 (exhales) 567 00:26:53,738 --> 00:26:56,805 (cheers) 568 00:26:56,871 --> 00:27:00,238 WOMAN: Damn! 569 00:27:00,305 --> 00:27:03,271 (cheers) 570 00:27:03,338 --> 00:27:04,271 WOMAN: There it is. 571 00:27:04,338 --> 00:27:07,038 {\an1}There it is, there it is! 572 00:27:07,105 --> 00:27:11,838 ♪ 573 00:27:11,905 --> 00:27:13,371 (laughs) 574 00:27:15,205 --> 00:27:17,905 (laughing) 575 00:27:17,971 --> 00:27:20,905 (cheering) 576 00:27:22,638 --> 00:27:24,671 {\an1}(Morillo exclaims) 577 00:27:24,738 --> 00:27:26,838 MORILLO: I'm a little bit speechless 578 00:27:26,905 --> 00:27:28,205 {\an1}with what just happened. 579 00:27:28,271 --> 00:27:30,571 {\an1}It's surreal, I, I don't know what else to say 580 00:27:30,638 --> 00:27:33,305 {\an1}other than, I still can't believe that I just saw that. 581 00:27:33,371 --> 00:27:36,505 {\an1}It's pretty magical, you know, it's, uh... 582 00:27:36,571 --> 00:27:37,671 {\an1}What we get to do. 583 00:27:37,738 --> 00:27:39,238 {\an1}(laughter, applause) 584 00:27:39,305 --> 00:27:42,905 {\an1}MORILLO: I'm terrified and really excited, but it's scary. 585 00:27:42,971 --> 00:27:47,771 {\an1}NARRATOR: Perseveranceis on its seven-month journey to Mars. 586 00:27:47,838 --> 00:27:50,438 {\an1}But for Elio Morillo, 587 00:27:50,505 --> 00:27:53,471 {\an1}the hardest work has just begun. 588 00:27:53,538 --> 00:27:55,305 (scooter starts) 589 00:27:55,371 --> 00:27:59,805 MORILLO: We're working around the clock. 590 00:27:59,871 --> 00:28:01,581 {\an1}Tonight, for example, I have to go in at 7:00 591 00:28:01,605 --> 00:28:04,638 {\an1}and I won't leave probably till 4:00 in the morning. 592 00:28:04,705 --> 00:28:06,714 {\an1}And that's kind of the nature of the work to make sure 593 00:28:06,738 --> 00:28:08,271 {\an1}we prepare for our landing 594 00:28:08,338 --> 00:28:11,838 {\an1}on the red planet. 595 00:28:11,905 --> 00:28:14,105 {\an1}We are working with the Earth version 596 00:28:14,171 --> 00:28:15,471 of Perseverance, 597 00:28:15,538 --> 00:28:16,838 {\an1}which we've calledOptimism. 598 00:28:16,905 --> 00:28:21,538 {\an1}The rover and the computer that it has on board 599 00:28:21,605 --> 00:28:25,771 {\an1}is exactly the same as the one that's onPerseverance. 600 00:28:25,838 --> 00:28:28,238 {\an1}My job is, is literally the one they portray 601 00:28:28,305 --> 00:28:29,605 {\an1}in, in "The Martian." 602 00:28:29,671 --> 00:28:31,571 {\an1}Is this the replica? - This is her. 603 00:28:31,638 --> 00:28:33,405 Okay, let's see it. 604 00:28:33,471 --> 00:28:36,438 {\an1}MORILLO: Where there's a lab that has the Earth versions 605 00:28:36,505 --> 00:28:38,771 {\an1}of all the vehicles... Pathfinder. 606 00:28:38,838 --> 00:28:42,705 {\an1}I work in the real lab that has the Earth version 607 00:28:42,771 --> 00:28:46,371 {\an1}of all the vehicles that have gone to Mars. 608 00:28:46,438 --> 00:28:49,071 NARRATOR: It's called the Mars Yard. 609 00:28:49,138 --> 00:28:51,205 ♪ 610 00:28:51,271 --> 00:28:55,371 Here, Optimism, Perseverance's twin, 611 00:28:55,438 --> 00:28:57,271 {\an1}faces some of the same challenges Perseverance 612 00:28:57,338 --> 00:29:00,871 {\an1}will face on Mars. 613 00:29:00,938 --> 00:29:03,038 {\an1}The only real way to do that is through simulation. 614 00:29:03,105 --> 00:29:06,905 {\an1}So the Mars Yard is where we actually perform driving. 615 00:29:06,971 --> 00:29:12,805 {\an1}We have soil that kind of looks like Martian sand, if you will. 616 00:29:12,871 --> 00:29:15,105 {\an1}There are rocks that we replicate. 617 00:29:15,171 --> 00:29:18,705 {\an1}And we have slopes, as well, so that we can climb the vehicle 618 00:29:18,771 --> 00:29:20,638 on the slopes. 619 00:29:20,705 --> 00:29:21,638 In doing that, 620 00:29:21,705 --> 00:29:23,671 {\an1}we typically will find bugs. 621 00:29:23,738 --> 00:29:28,838 {\an1}NARRATOR: Glitches in the software, the rover's brain. 622 00:29:28,905 --> 00:29:31,038 MORILLO: And as we come up with fixes, 623 00:29:31,105 --> 00:29:34,605 {\an1}we will uplink those fixes to the real vehicle. 624 00:29:34,671 --> 00:29:37,405 {\an1}And that is the purpose of my team. 625 00:29:37,471 --> 00:29:39,838 {\an1}So that, hopefully, we find these issues 626 00:29:39,905 --> 00:29:41,705 {\an1}before they happen on the real vehicle. 627 00:29:41,771 --> 00:29:43,771 ♪ 628 00:29:43,838 --> 00:29:46,538 {\an1}In case things go wrong, we better figure out how to fix it 629 00:29:46,605 --> 00:29:48,071 {\an1}through software, 630 00:29:48,138 --> 00:29:52,871 {\an1}because at this point in time, we can't send mechanics to Mars. 631 00:29:52,938 --> 00:29:54,371 I'm an avid user of social media. 632 00:29:54,438 --> 00:29:57,171 {\an1}And some of the images I've posted are 633 00:29:57,238 --> 00:29:59,471 {\an1}of myself working on the vehicle. 634 00:29:59,538 --> 00:30:01,305 {\an1}I think personally, 635 00:30:01,371 --> 00:30:04,405 {\an1}being a Hispanic man, it's very important for people like me 636 00:30:04,471 --> 00:30:06,938 {\an1}to understand that there are people that look and sound 637 00:30:07,005 --> 00:30:10,738 {\an1}like me that are working on such technologies. 638 00:30:10,805 --> 00:30:12,138 {\an1}That is why I share what I do. 639 00:30:12,205 --> 00:30:13,738 {\an1}And I like to show people 640 00:30:13,805 --> 00:30:15,565 {\an1}what we're doing, because it's pretty unique. 641 00:30:17,338 --> 00:30:19,371 {\an1}NARRATOR: A few months after Perseverance lands 642 00:30:19,438 --> 00:30:21,005 {\an1}on the red planet, 643 00:30:21,071 --> 00:30:24,438 {\an7}it will drop a special little package on the surface 644 00:30:24,505 --> 00:30:30,138 {\an7}that could revolutionize the future of space exploration. 645 00:30:30,205 --> 00:30:33,771 {\an1}A tiny copter named Ingenuity 646 00:30:33,838 --> 00:30:38,905 {\an1}could be the first aircraft to fly on another planet. 647 00:30:38,971 --> 00:30:40,491 BOB BALARAM: When we first proposed it, 648 00:30:40,538 --> 00:30:43,305 {\an7}there were a number of naysayers, even at JPL, 649 00:30:43,371 --> 00:30:45,238 {\an7}who said, "Oh, this thing can never fly." 650 00:30:45,305 --> 00:30:47,071 {\an7}I thought it was going to be challenging 651 00:30:47,138 --> 00:30:48,138 {\an7}every step of the way. 652 00:30:49,771 --> 00:30:51,505 {\an1}In fact, at the beginning, 653 00:30:51,571 --> 00:30:53,305 {\an1}it was the question of even feasibility. 654 00:30:53,371 --> 00:30:54,805 Can it be done? 655 00:30:56,405 --> 00:30:58,838 {\an1}NARRATOR: What makes flying on Mars so challenging 656 00:30:58,905 --> 00:31:02,871 {\an1}is its extremely thin atmosphere... 657 00:31:02,938 --> 00:31:06,138 {\an1}100 times thinner than Earth's. 658 00:31:06,205 --> 00:31:09,605 {\an1}The thinner the atmosphere, the harder it is 659 00:31:09,671 --> 00:31:13,938 {\an1}for a helicopter to generate lift. 660 00:31:14,005 --> 00:31:15,505 AUNG: Fundamentally, a helicopter 661 00:31:15,571 --> 00:31:17,638 flies, you know, by first generating lift, 662 00:31:17,705 --> 00:31:21,138 {\an1}and the lift is generated by the blades 663 00:31:21,205 --> 00:31:23,971 pushing the air, 664 00:31:24,038 --> 00:31:25,605 {\an1}and that provides the lift. 665 00:31:27,271 --> 00:31:30,771 {\an1}NARRATOR: On helicopters, the blades are curved on top, 666 00:31:30,838 --> 00:31:35,505 {\an1}and are also angled to redirect the airflow downward. 667 00:31:35,571 --> 00:31:38,771 {\an1}Because of this design, as they rotate, 668 00:31:38,838 --> 00:31:41,805 {\an1}the air pressure on top of the blades decreases 669 00:31:41,871 --> 00:31:47,338 {\an1}and the air pressure underneath the blades increases. 670 00:31:47,405 --> 00:31:51,738 {\an1}That difference in pressure pushes the helicopter up. 671 00:31:51,805 --> 00:31:56,471 {\an1}Earth's dense, thick atmosphere helps make lift possible. 672 00:31:56,538 --> 00:31:58,738 ♪ 673 00:31:58,805 --> 00:32:01,171 {\an1}In order to fly on Mars, 674 00:32:01,238 --> 00:32:03,538 {\an1}the team had to find a way to compensate 675 00:32:03,605 --> 00:32:05,771 {\an1}for its thin atmosphere. 676 00:32:05,838 --> 00:32:09,871 {\an1}To rethink the physics of flight. 677 00:32:09,938 --> 00:32:14,005 {\an1}AUNG: You have to build a vehicle that has a large blade, you know, 678 00:32:14,071 --> 00:32:18,238 {\an1}significantly large proportional to the size of the vehicle. 679 00:32:18,305 --> 00:32:20,305 {\an1}And the blades have to spin very fast 680 00:32:20,371 --> 00:32:22,738 {\an1}and the vehicle has to be very light. 681 00:32:22,805 --> 00:32:29,138 {\an1}NARRATOR: In 2018, the team took their copter on a test run. 682 00:32:29,205 --> 00:32:33,605 {\an1}This special chamber has had most of the air sucked out of it 683 00:32:33,671 --> 00:32:38,471 {\an1}so it can accurately mimic the thin atmosphere of Mars. 684 00:32:38,538 --> 00:32:40,105 AUNG: This is a moment of truth. 685 00:32:40,171 --> 00:32:41,771 {\an1}You send the command, 686 00:32:41,838 --> 00:32:43,771 {\an1}the helicopter is sitting on the ground, 687 00:32:43,838 --> 00:32:45,738 {\an1}and it starts spinning. 688 00:32:45,805 --> 00:32:47,805 {\an1}And the danger was, is it going to start, you know, 689 00:32:47,871 --> 00:32:50,738 {\an1}skittering across the, the chamber floor? 690 00:32:50,805 --> 00:32:55,205 {\an1}(blades whirring) 691 00:32:55,271 --> 00:32:57,405 {\an1}The vehicle was perfect. 692 00:32:57,471 --> 00:32:58,631 {\an1}It was balanced so perfectly. 693 00:32:58,671 --> 00:33:01,738 {\an1}(blades whirring) 694 00:33:01,805 --> 00:33:03,971 {\an1}Our minds go back to what the Wright brothers 695 00:33:04,038 --> 00:33:06,038 {\an1}must have gone through. 696 00:33:06,105 --> 00:33:08,238 The first moment they took flight, 697 00:33:08,305 --> 00:33:10,471 {\an1}they must have felt 698 00:33:10,538 --> 00:33:13,038 {\an1}the emotion, the feeling, 699 00:33:13,105 --> 00:33:16,505 {\an1}the reward they were looking for. 700 00:33:16,571 --> 00:33:18,138 {\an1}(blades whirring) 701 00:33:18,205 --> 00:33:19,971 BALARAM: It's been a long journey. 702 00:33:20,038 --> 00:33:21,238 {\an1}We've done all the testing 703 00:33:21,305 --> 00:33:23,771 here on Earth, and now it's time to go to Mars 704 00:33:23,838 --> 00:33:26,505 {\an1}and prove that this thing can really fly 705 00:33:26,571 --> 00:33:29,138 {\an1}in the actual environment of Mars. 706 00:33:29,205 --> 00:33:31,071 ♪ 707 00:33:31,138 --> 00:33:34,071 NARRATOR: If all works as planned, 708 00:33:34,138 --> 00:33:39,805 {\an1}Ingenuity will take a series of flights over about 30 days, 709 00:33:39,871 --> 00:33:43,938 {\an1}venturing farther with each flight. 710 00:33:44,005 --> 00:33:46,438 AUNG: When astronauts get to Mars, 711 00:33:46,505 --> 00:33:47,838 {\an1}you know, in the future, 712 00:33:47,905 --> 00:33:50,438 {\an1}being able to scout and survey 713 00:33:50,505 --> 00:33:52,505 and just having the aerial dimension 714 00:33:52,571 --> 00:33:53,571 will be crucial. 715 00:33:53,638 --> 00:33:55,405 ♪ 716 00:33:55,471 --> 00:33:56,947 {\an1}BALARAM: To make the whole planet accessible 717 00:33:56,971 --> 00:33:58,171 {\an1}through a new form of mobility 718 00:33:58,238 --> 00:34:01,438 {\an1}is going to be transforming in terms of what it does 719 00:34:01,505 --> 00:34:02,438 for exploration. 720 00:34:02,505 --> 00:34:06,438 (whirring) 721 00:34:08,405 --> 00:34:11,305 {\an1}NARRATOR: Another passenger on Perseverance 722 00:34:11,371 --> 00:34:15,371 {\an1}could help turn our sci-fi dreams of human exploration 723 00:34:15,438 --> 00:34:17,505 into a reality. 724 00:34:17,571 --> 00:34:19,805 {\an1}In fact, in the feature film 725 00:34:19,871 --> 00:34:21,771 "The Martian," 726 00:34:21,838 --> 00:34:24,805 {\an1}Mark Watney couldn't have survived without it. 727 00:34:24,871 --> 00:34:26,838 JEFFREY HOFFMAN: In the movie "The Martian," 728 00:34:26,905 --> 00:34:31,071 {\an7}there was a mention of a device called an oxygenator. 729 00:34:31,138 --> 00:34:33,338 Everything here that's keeping me alive... 730 00:34:33,405 --> 00:34:35,471 The oxygenator, the water reclaimer... 731 00:34:35,538 --> 00:34:36,814 HOFFMAN: Which we like to think of 732 00:34:36,838 --> 00:34:41,205 {\an1}as the, maybe the great-great-grandchild of Moxie. 733 00:34:41,271 --> 00:34:42,771 ♪ 734 00:34:42,838 --> 00:34:45,605 NARRATOR: This little gold box named Moxie 735 00:34:45,671 --> 00:34:48,971 {\an1}will test whether it's possible to take deadly Martian air 736 00:34:49,038 --> 00:34:51,938 {\an1}and create breathable air. 737 00:34:52,005 --> 00:34:53,705 ♪ 738 00:34:53,771 --> 00:34:56,305 The air on Mars is not only thin, 739 00:34:56,371 --> 00:35:00,838 {\an7}it's rich with carbon dioxide... CO2. 740 00:35:00,905 --> 00:35:03,605 {\an7}HOFFMAN: So what we're trying to do with Moxie is to take 741 00:35:03,671 --> 00:35:05,671 {\an7}a carbon dioxide molecule... 742 00:35:05,738 --> 00:35:09,405 {\an8}CO2, one carbon, two oxygen atoms... 743 00:35:09,471 --> 00:35:12,005 {\an7}and split off one of those oxygen atoms. 744 00:35:13,838 --> 00:35:17,005 {\an7}NARRATOR: An oxygen atom doesn't like to be alone. 745 00:35:17,071 --> 00:35:20,238 {\an7}After it breaks away from the carbon dioxide, 746 00:35:20,305 --> 00:35:24,405 {\an7}it joins with another oxygen atom, creating O2, 747 00:35:24,471 --> 00:35:28,171 {\an7}which is in the air that we breathe. 748 00:35:28,238 --> 00:35:33,138 {\an1}Here on Earth, the atmosphere has plenty of O2, 749 00:35:33,205 --> 00:35:35,771 {\an1}thanks to photosynthesis. 750 00:35:35,838 --> 00:35:37,505 {\an1}We take all that oxygen for granted. 751 00:35:39,705 --> 00:35:40,938 {\an1}When we're on Mars, 752 00:35:41,005 --> 00:35:42,905 {\an7}we have to make the best of what we've got 753 00:35:42,971 --> 00:35:44,471 {\an7}and get our oxygen 754 00:35:44,538 --> 00:35:47,471 {\an1}out of that carbon dioxide. 755 00:35:47,538 --> 00:35:48,705 NARRATOR: Breathable oxygen 756 00:35:48,771 --> 00:35:53,338 {\an1}will be crucial for humans to survive on Mars. 757 00:35:53,405 --> 00:35:54,871 HOFFMAN: There's no question, 758 00:35:54,938 --> 00:35:58,338 {\an1}if I were going to Mars, I would want oxygen to breathe. 759 00:35:58,405 --> 00:36:01,471 {\an1}But that's not anywhere near 760 00:36:01,538 --> 00:36:05,138 {\an1}the, the major requirement for oxygen. 761 00:36:05,205 --> 00:36:07,405 {\an1}Assuming that I want to leave the surface of Mars 762 00:36:07,471 --> 00:36:10,905 {\an1}and get back to orbit and, and catch my ride home to Earth, 763 00:36:10,971 --> 00:36:13,871 {\an1}I'm going to need a lot of propellant in a rocket 764 00:36:13,938 --> 00:36:16,438 {\an1}to get me off the surface of Mars. 765 00:36:16,505 --> 00:36:19,105 {\an1}Tens of tons, in fact. 766 00:36:19,171 --> 00:36:22,238 {\an1}Whether you have a campfire, 767 00:36:22,305 --> 00:36:24,205 whether you have an internal combustion engine 768 00:36:24,271 --> 00:36:26,205 {\an1}in a car or a truck... 769 00:36:26,271 --> 00:36:27,938 {\an1}anytime you'd want to burn something, 770 00:36:28,005 --> 00:36:29,871 {\an1}you need two things: 771 00:36:29,938 --> 00:36:31,971 you need a fuel and you need oxygen. 772 00:36:32,038 --> 00:36:36,071 {\an1}NARRATOR: To take off from the surface of Mars with a crew 773 00:36:36,138 --> 00:36:40,105 {\an1}of four, in a rocket about the size of this pickup truck, 774 00:36:40,171 --> 00:36:44,205 {\an1}how much fuel and oxygen do you need? 775 00:36:44,271 --> 00:36:45,514 {\an1}Oh, we need about seven tons of fuel. 776 00:36:45,538 --> 00:36:47,138 {\an1}That's a lot of fuel. 777 00:36:47,205 --> 00:36:51,071 {\an1}And we need about 25 tons 778 00:36:51,138 --> 00:36:56,471 of liquid oxygen to burn all that fuel. 779 00:36:56,538 --> 00:36:58,205 {\an1}To picture how much that weighs, 780 00:36:58,271 --> 00:37:01,905 {\an1}we can start with a five-gallon jug of water, 781 00:37:01,971 --> 00:37:05,071 {\an1}the kind that we put on top of the water coolers. 782 00:37:05,138 --> 00:37:07,438 {\an1}If we wanted to put that much liquid oxygen 783 00:37:07,505 --> 00:37:09,138 {\an1}in those water jugs, 784 00:37:09,205 --> 00:37:14,071 {\an1}we would have over 1,300 of those jugs. 785 00:37:14,138 --> 00:37:16,605 {\an1}So imagine putting 1,320 786 00:37:16,671 --> 00:37:19,371 {\an1}water bottles in the back of this truck. 787 00:37:19,438 --> 00:37:22,138 ♪ 788 00:37:22,205 --> 00:37:26,105 {\an1}That would be tens-of-feet-high stack of water bottles. 789 00:37:26,171 --> 00:37:29,338 {\an1}Too much even for the water bottle delivery van, 790 00:37:29,405 --> 00:37:31,338 {\an1}never mind this little pickup. 791 00:37:34,338 --> 00:37:38,105 {\an1}That oxygen turns out to be the single heaviest thing 792 00:37:38,171 --> 00:37:39,338 {\an1}we would need to take 793 00:37:39,405 --> 00:37:44,505 {\an1}on a mission to Mars with astronauts. 794 00:37:44,571 --> 00:37:50,571 {\an1}It dominates the cost and the complexity of the mission. 795 00:37:50,638 --> 00:37:54,271 {\an1}So what if we can start living off the land? 796 00:37:54,338 --> 00:37:58,505 {\an1}By saying, "We're not going to bring any oxygen with us. 797 00:37:58,571 --> 00:38:01,538 {\an1}"We're going to make it on Mars and use the oxygen that we make 798 00:38:01,605 --> 00:38:05,771 {\an1}"to fuel the rocket that will take our astronauts home, 799 00:38:05,838 --> 00:38:08,038 {\an1}that will take Mark Watney home." 800 00:38:08,105 --> 00:38:09,738 ♪ 801 00:38:09,805 --> 00:38:14,271 {\an1}NARRATOR: If Moxie can efficiently create burnable 802 00:38:14,338 --> 00:38:18,138 {\an1}oxygen, then the sci-fi dream of human exploration of Mars 803 00:38:18,205 --> 00:38:21,305 {\an1}may become a reality. 804 00:38:21,371 --> 00:38:23,471 {\an1}FARLEY: It's clear that the United States 805 00:38:23,538 --> 00:38:25,305 {\an1}is putting in a big effort 806 00:38:25,371 --> 00:38:26,838 {\an7}to send astronauts to Mars. 807 00:38:26,905 --> 00:38:29,738 {\an7}And, and the technologies that we are demonstrating 808 00:38:29,805 --> 00:38:31,671 {\an7}are going to make that easier. 809 00:38:31,738 --> 00:38:33,405 ♪ 810 00:38:33,471 --> 00:38:37,571 {\an1}NARRATOR: Perseverance will test technology that will take 811 00:38:37,638 --> 00:38:40,005 {\an1}exploration into the future as it collects samples 812 00:38:40,071 --> 00:38:43,271 of Martian rock. 813 00:38:43,338 --> 00:38:46,471 Once it's done, how will these samples 814 00:38:46,538 --> 00:38:49,971 {\an1}make their way back home? 815 00:38:50,038 --> 00:38:52,171 {\an1}ALBERT HALDEMAN: Mars Sample Return really is an 816 00:38:52,238 --> 00:38:54,571 {\an1}international program between NASA and ESA. 817 00:38:54,638 --> 00:38:57,005 ♪ 818 00:38:57,071 --> 00:38:58,547 {\an1}KELLY GEELEN: We all come from different backgrounds 819 00:38:58,571 --> 00:39:00,305 {\an1}and we have, of course, different roles 820 00:39:00,371 --> 00:39:01,671 {\an1}to play in the bigger picture. 821 00:39:01,738 --> 00:39:03,414 {\an1}But everybody is working towards the same goal. 822 00:39:03,438 --> 00:39:06,205 {\an1}If you think about it, it's amazing 823 00:39:06,271 --> 00:39:08,805 {\an7}how a collaboration across the globe can come together 824 00:39:08,871 --> 00:39:11,205 {\an7}to do such an amazing thing. 825 00:39:11,271 --> 00:39:15,471 {\an1}NARRATOR: Current plans call for another lander to travel to Mars 826 00:39:15,538 --> 00:39:17,805 within a decade, 827 00:39:17,871 --> 00:39:19,938 {\an1}and a multi-part mission 828 00:39:20,005 --> 00:39:22,838 {\an1}to bring the sample tubes back to Earth will begin. 829 00:39:24,371 --> 00:39:26,447 {\an1}ALASTAIR WAYMAN: It would be a big risk, a big gamble, 830 00:39:26,471 --> 00:39:29,305 {\an7}to bet the whole of Mars Sample Return on the fact that 831 00:39:29,371 --> 00:39:32,538 {\an7}Perseverance would still be alive and fully functional 832 00:39:32,605 --> 00:39:35,405 {\an7}after almost a decade on the surface of Mars. 833 00:39:35,471 --> 00:39:40,405 {\an1}NARRATOR: So researchers across the globe must prepare 834 00:39:40,471 --> 00:39:42,105 {\an1}for different scenarios. 835 00:39:42,171 --> 00:39:46,071 {\an7}The Perseverance rover has the possibility to either hang on 836 00:39:46,138 --> 00:39:49,071 {\an7}to sample tubes or drop them onto the surface. 837 00:39:49,138 --> 00:39:52,571 NARRATOR: Just north of London, 838 00:39:52,638 --> 00:39:54,371 {\an1}engineers at Airbus 839 00:39:54,438 --> 00:39:57,605 {\an1}are preparing for one of these scenarios. 840 00:39:57,671 --> 00:40:01,438 Meet Fetch. 841 00:40:01,505 --> 00:40:07,005 {\an1}Think of this little rover as a celestial messenger service. 842 00:40:07,071 --> 00:40:08,714 {\an1}VIJENDRAN: Perseverance will drop the sample tubes 843 00:40:08,738 --> 00:40:09,971 {\an1}on the surface of Mars, 844 00:40:10,038 --> 00:40:13,605 {\an1}drive a little bit away, and take a lot of good photos 845 00:40:13,671 --> 00:40:16,538 {\an1}to document exactly where the sample has landed. 846 00:40:16,605 --> 00:40:18,338 {\an1}And we will be able to direct 847 00:40:18,405 --> 00:40:22,671 {\an1}the Sample Fetch Rover to the general area 848 00:40:22,738 --> 00:40:26,971 {\an1}within a meter or so of the actual samples on the surface. 849 00:40:28,671 --> 00:40:31,571 {\an1}NARRATOR: Once Fetch gets close, it will need to find 850 00:40:31,638 --> 00:40:34,971 {\an1}the sample tubes on its own. 851 00:40:35,038 --> 00:40:38,305 {\an1}WAYMAN: We need to have autonomous systems on board 852 00:40:38,371 --> 00:40:41,005 {\an1}that can take a picture of the scene in front of it, 853 00:40:41,071 --> 00:40:42,438 {\an1}identify what's a rock, 854 00:40:42,505 --> 00:40:43,671 {\an1}identify what's a crack, 855 00:40:43,738 --> 00:40:47,038 {\an1}identify what is the tubes. 856 00:40:47,105 --> 00:40:50,238 {\an1}NARRATOR: Fetch starts by taking a picture of the general area 857 00:40:50,305 --> 00:40:52,705 {\an1}where the tubes should be. 858 00:40:52,771 --> 00:40:56,605 {\an1}So this is the raw image that we've taken right as we've 859 00:40:56,671 --> 00:40:58,471 {\an1}approached the sample tubes. 860 00:40:58,538 --> 00:41:01,271 {\an1}You can see on the raw image that there's clearly a number 861 00:41:01,338 --> 00:41:03,005 {\an1}of tubes dotted around the terrain, 862 00:41:03,071 --> 00:41:04,705 {\an1}as well as a couple of rocks. 863 00:41:04,771 --> 00:41:09,571 {\an1}NARRATOR: Through a series of steps, it decodes the scene, 864 00:41:09,638 --> 00:41:14,938 {\an1}homing in on the tubes based on their shape and color. 865 00:41:15,005 --> 00:41:18,005 {\an1}WAYMAN: In the times that the tubes are on the surface, 866 00:41:18,071 --> 00:41:22,038 {\an1}there will certainly be some form of dust deposition on them. 867 00:41:22,105 --> 00:41:24,471 {\an1}Sand might build up adrift on one side of the tubes. 868 00:41:24,538 --> 00:41:27,271 {\an1}But it's not going to be a thick coating 869 00:41:27,338 --> 00:41:29,538 {\an1}that completely obscures it. 870 00:41:29,605 --> 00:41:33,138 {\an1}NARRATOR: Fetch comes up with a plan to grab the tubes, 871 00:41:33,205 --> 00:41:37,671 {\an1}but it can't do it without Delian, 872 00:41:37,738 --> 00:41:42,605 {\an1}a savvy robotic arm being developed in Italy. 873 00:41:42,671 --> 00:41:47,271 {\an1}This lightweight arm is equipped with a brain of its own. 874 00:41:47,338 --> 00:41:50,205 {\an7}This operation must be performed autonomously 875 00:41:50,271 --> 00:41:53,405 {\an7}with the vision system. 876 00:41:53,471 --> 00:41:57,505 {\an1}NARRATOR: In other words, the brain of the rover 877 00:41:57,571 --> 00:42:01,505 {\an1}and the brain of the arm work together to locate 878 00:42:01,571 --> 00:42:04,205 {\an1}and pick up the samples. 879 00:42:04,271 --> 00:42:07,338 {\an1}WAYMAN: Being able to do that is something that's, 880 00:42:07,405 --> 00:42:09,571 {\an1}that's completely new, completely novel. 881 00:42:09,638 --> 00:42:12,038 {\an1}It's not been done on any Mars missions before. 882 00:42:12,105 --> 00:42:14,238 {\an1}So it's something that's a key development challenge 883 00:42:14,305 --> 00:42:15,605 {\an1}that, that we're working on. 884 00:42:15,671 --> 00:42:18,671 ♪ 885 00:42:18,738 --> 00:42:21,605 {\an1}NARRATOR: Once it collects the tubes, Fetch will bring them 886 00:42:21,671 --> 00:42:24,371 {\an1}to a pint-sized rocket. 887 00:42:24,438 --> 00:42:26,705 HALDEMAN: The most challenging element 888 00:42:26,771 --> 00:42:29,905 {\an7}of that whole architecture is going to be launching 889 00:42:29,971 --> 00:42:31,038 {\an7}a rocket off of Mars. 890 00:42:33,638 --> 00:42:35,471 {\an1}That is super-ambitious. 891 00:42:35,538 --> 00:42:38,438 {\an1}That will be a first. 892 00:42:38,505 --> 00:42:42,605 {\an1}NARRATOR: The rocket, designed by NASA, will release the 893 00:42:42,671 --> 00:42:45,238 {\an1}samples, which will be grabbed by another orbiter, 894 00:42:45,305 --> 00:42:47,038 designed by ESA. 895 00:42:47,105 --> 00:42:48,905 GEELEN: The Earth Return Orbiter 896 00:42:48,971 --> 00:42:53,838 {\an1}is hurtling around the Martian planet by 7,600 miles per hour. 897 00:42:53,905 --> 00:42:56,738 {\an1}The job for an orbiter is to slightly adjust its velocity 898 00:42:56,805 --> 00:43:01,805 {\an1}to make sure that we can capture this basketball inside a hoop. 899 00:43:01,871 --> 00:43:03,738 {\an1}We'll have some sort of trap door that opens, 900 00:43:03,805 --> 00:43:06,905 {\an1}and then we'll basically swallow this basketball up 901 00:43:06,971 --> 00:43:10,471 {\an1}and put it into our spacecraft. 902 00:43:10,538 --> 00:43:13,838 {\an1}HALDEMAN: Through various stages of mechanisms and airlocks, 903 00:43:13,905 --> 00:43:18,271 {\an1}if you will, put it inside a Earth entry vehicle 904 00:43:18,338 --> 00:43:21,471 {\an1}that itself will be clean, 905 00:43:21,538 --> 00:43:25,738 {\an1}and we will have these various layers that will protect 906 00:43:25,805 --> 00:43:28,871 {\an1}the Earth when we bring that sample back from Mars. 907 00:43:28,938 --> 00:43:34,205 {\an1}NARRATOR: To protect Earth from whatever the samples contain. 908 00:43:34,271 --> 00:43:38,271 {\an1}PITTS: Incredible safeguards are being developed 909 00:43:38,338 --> 00:43:43,405 {\an7}to make sure that any object brought from Mars 910 00:43:43,471 --> 00:43:47,671 {\an7}remains in an environment that is completely cut off 911 00:43:47,738 --> 00:43:53,305 {\an1}from Earth environment in every possible instance and manner. 912 00:43:53,371 --> 00:43:56,571 {\an7}The nice thing about sample return is, we've done it 913 00:43:56,638 --> 00:43:57,838 {\an7}in the past with the moon... 914 00:43:57,905 --> 00:43:59,538 {\an1}the Apollo samples. 915 00:43:59,605 --> 00:44:02,505 {\an1}Samples were treated as hazardous 916 00:44:02,571 --> 00:44:04,738 {\an1}until they could prove that it did not affect 917 00:44:04,805 --> 00:44:07,005 {\an1}humans negatively. 918 00:44:07,071 --> 00:44:09,738 {\an1}And the same thing will be done for any sample return mission. 919 00:44:09,805 --> 00:44:11,738 {\an1}The items are treated as potentially hazardous 920 00:44:11,805 --> 00:44:14,638 {\an1}until we know that it's safe. 921 00:44:14,705 --> 00:44:16,638 {\an1}You want to be overly cautious, 922 00:44:16,705 --> 00:44:20,205 {\an1}you want to sure that you prove without a shadow of a doubt 923 00:44:20,271 --> 00:44:22,238 {\an1}that it is not hazardous to humans. 924 00:44:22,305 --> 00:44:24,105 ♪ 925 00:44:24,171 --> 00:44:25,781 {\an1}NARRATOR: But long before we would confront 926 00:44:25,805 --> 00:44:29,238 {\an1}any potential danger from Martian samples, 927 00:44:29,305 --> 00:44:34,171 {\an1}Perseverance must land where no rover has dared land before. 928 00:44:34,238 --> 00:44:40,338 {\an7}Back in May 2019, in the heart of Death Valley, 929 00:44:40,405 --> 00:44:44,105 {\an1}a team of engineers test a new autonomous landing system 930 00:44:44,171 --> 00:44:47,138 {\an1}they hope will give their rover the ability 931 00:44:47,205 --> 00:44:48,538 {\an1}to steer out of trouble... 932 00:44:48,605 --> 00:44:52,038 {\an1}to be its own pilot. 933 00:44:52,105 --> 00:44:53,171 {\an7}We get one chance. 934 00:44:53,238 --> 00:44:54,605 {\an7}We have no opportunity to fix it. 935 00:44:54,671 --> 00:44:57,071 {\an7}And it has to work the very first time. 936 00:44:57,138 --> 00:45:02,405 {\an1}NARRATOR: Inside this trailer is a makeshift mission headquarters 937 00:45:02,471 --> 00:45:05,971 {\an1}where they will monitor if the new landing system 938 00:45:06,038 --> 00:45:07,705 actually works. 939 00:45:07,771 --> 00:45:10,605 {\an1}Our previous missions really only had one computer, 940 00:45:10,671 --> 00:45:13,771 {\an1}one brain, that was doing the entire entry, descent, 941 00:45:13,838 --> 00:45:15,238 {\an1}and landing sequence. 942 00:45:15,305 --> 00:45:16,238 Now we have two. 943 00:45:16,305 --> 00:45:17,905 ♪ 944 00:45:17,971 --> 00:45:20,805 {\an1}NARRATOR: Two brains that must work hand in hand to guide 945 00:45:20,871 --> 00:45:25,771 {\an1}the rover to land safely near the delta of Jezero Crater. 946 00:45:25,838 --> 00:45:28,138 {\an1}CHEN: That delta has created this cliff that's, like, 947 00:45:28,205 --> 00:45:30,071 {\an1}60 to 80 meters tall, 948 00:45:30,138 --> 00:45:31,547 {\an7}kind of along the lines of how tall we're seeing 949 00:45:31,571 --> 00:45:33,038 {\an7}the terrain behind us. 950 00:45:33,105 --> 00:45:39,805 {\an1}NARRATOR: The rover must land close to it, not crash into it. 951 00:45:39,871 --> 00:45:43,038 {\an1}To test the rover's new brains, 952 00:45:43,105 --> 00:45:46,471 {\an1}the team secures one on the nose of a helicopter 953 00:45:46,538 --> 00:45:50,471 {\an1}and the other behind the cockpit. 954 00:45:52,771 --> 00:45:54,738 {\an1}The helicopter, and brains, 955 00:45:54,805 --> 00:45:57,738 take off... 956 00:45:57,805 --> 00:45:59,538 {\an1}...heading to a section of Death Valley 957 00:45:59,605 --> 00:46:01,805 {\an1}that looks remarkably like 958 00:46:01,871 --> 00:46:05,405 {\an1}the surface of Mars. 959 00:46:05,471 --> 00:46:06,671 ANDREW JOHNSON: Typically, 960 00:46:06,738 --> 00:46:09,238 {\an7}when we do these tests, you start out very nervous, 961 00:46:09,305 --> 00:46:12,038 {\an1}and often things break, 962 00:46:12,105 --> 00:46:14,838 {\an1}and you have to fix them. 963 00:46:14,905 --> 00:46:17,505 {\an1}MOHAN: We're really trying to find the unknown unknowns. 964 00:46:17,571 --> 00:46:19,371 {\an1}What if we didn't think of something that 965 00:46:19,438 --> 00:46:21,405 {\an1}really will affect the mission? 966 00:46:22,505 --> 00:46:23,838 {\an1}Hammer, do you read me? 967 00:46:23,905 --> 00:46:27,838 {\an1}NARRATOR: The helicopter goes above 10,000 feet... 968 00:46:27,905 --> 00:46:30,071 {\an1}CHEN: Which is pretty high for a helicopter to fly. 969 00:46:30,138 --> 00:46:34,071 {\an1}NARRATOR: High enough for the crew to need oxygen, 970 00:46:34,138 --> 00:46:37,071 {\an1}and around the same height where Perseverance will start 971 00:46:37,138 --> 00:46:41,371 {\an1}to use its pilot's brain to land on Mars. 972 00:46:41,438 --> 00:46:43,547 {\an1}CHEN: Just like you and I can take a map and look at it, 973 00:46:43,571 --> 00:46:45,905 {\an1}and then look around and see different landmarks, 974 00:46:45,971 --> 00:46:48,038 {\an1}and see what's, you know, what's where on the map, 975 00:46:48,105 --> 00:46:51,338 {\an1}the rover figures out where it is based on knowing 976 00:46:51,405 --> 00:46:53,538 {\an1}where all the landmarks are in the map 977 00:46:53,605 --> 00:46:55,038 {\an1}and then identifying them. 978 00:46:55,105 --> 00:46:56,838 NARRATOR: A lot like the job 979 00:46:56,905 --> 00:46:58,438 {\an1}Pete Conrad and Alan Bean faced 980 00:46:58,505 --> 00:47:03,071 {\an1}when they landed on the moon on the Apollo 12 mission. 981 00:47:03,138 --> 00:47:04,947 {\an1}ASTRONAUT (on radio): Okay, we're at 19,000 feet. 982 00:47:04,971 --> 00:47:06,771 {\an1}I got some kind of a horizon out there. 983 00:47:06,838 --> 00:47:08,914 {\an1}I got some craters, too, but I don't know where I am yet. 984 00:47:08,938 --> 00:47:11,238 {\an1}CHEN: They were looking out the window 985 00:47:11,305 --> 00:47:13,181 {\an1}at different craters and different features on the moon. 986 00:47:13,205 --> 00:47:15,005 {\an1}ASTRONAUT (on radio): I think I see my crater. 987 00:47:15,038 --> 00:47:16,381 {\an1}CHEN: That they knew of from maps of the moon. 988 00:47:16,405 --> 00:47:18,305 {\an1}ASTRONAUT (on radio): There it is! 989 00:47:18,371 --> 00:47:21,705 {\an1}There it is, oh, my God, right down the middle of the road! 990 00:47:21,771 --> 00:47:24,171 {\an1}CHEN: They figured out where they were. 991 00:47:24,238 --> 00:47:25,447 {\an1}You know, we're doing the same thing that 992 00:47:25,471 --> 00:47:28,571 {\an1}those astronauts did on Apollo 12, just on Mars. 993 00:47:28,638 --> 00:47:30,638 ♪ 994 00:47:30,705 --> 00:47:32,847 {\an1}MOHAN: The vision computer is telling the rover computer, 995 00:47:32,871 --> 00:47:35,405 {\an1}"Here's where I am, here's where I am, here's where I am." 996 00:47:35,471 --> 00:47:37,438 {\an1}The rover computer takes where we are, 997 00:47:37,505 --> 00:47:40,138 {\an1}figures out where we can go, 998 00:47:40,205 --> 00:47:41,571 {\an1}and picks the safest spot 999 00:47:41,638 --> 00:47:44,238 {\an1}in the place where we can actually reach. 1000 00:47:44,305 --> 00:47:47,571 {\an1}And it does all of that in the snap of a finger. 1001 00:47:47,638 --> 00:47:50,005 {\an1}NARRATOR: In the trailer, the team tracks 1002 00:47:50,071 --> 00:47:51,071 {\an1}the brains' progress. 1003 00:47:52,838 --> 00:47:54,938 {\an1}So on this side, we have a map that we've made 1004 00:47:55,005 --> 00:47:56,938 {\an1}of our landing site that we're matching to, 1005 00:47:57,005 --> 00:48:02,205 {\an1}and this is the image that's taken on board. 1006 00:48:02,271 --> 00:48:05,638 {\an1}NARRATOR: The squares on the monitors represent landmarks. 1007 00:48:05,705 --> 00:48:08,405 {\an1}The colors tell them if the brain on the helicopter 1008 00:48:08,471 --> 00:48:11,071 {\an1}is correctly identifying those landmarks 1009 00:48:11,138 --> 00:48:14,438 {\an1}and matching them to its map. 1010 00:48:14,505 --> 00:48:16,405 {\an1}JOHNSON: So green ones are ones that are good, 1011 00:48:16,471 --> 00:48:18,038 {\an1}that we matched correctly, 1012 00:48:18,105 --> 00:48:19,605 {\an1}that the system believes are correct. 1013 00:48:19,671 --> 00:48:23,205 NARRATOR: After six runs over the desert, 1014 00:48:23,271 --> 00:48:25,705 {\an1}there's plenty of green on the map. 1015 00:48:25,771 --> 00:48:30,605 {\an1}The rover's brain appears to be up to the task. 1016 00:48:30,671 --> 00:48:33,405 {\an1}But will it work on Mars? 1017 00:48:35,705 --> 00:48:38,171 {\an1}February 18, 2021. 1018 00:48:38,238 --> 00:48:43,038 {\an1}Almost two years after their test run in Death Valley... 1019 00:48:43,105 --> 00:48:44,971 {\an1}MOHAN: Standing by for cruise stage separation. 1020 00:48:45,038 --> 00:48:49,005 {\an1}NARRATOR: the team attempts to land their rover in Jezero 1021 00:48:49,071 --> 00:48:54,171 {\an1}Crater under circumstances no one could have prepared for. 1022 00:48:54,238 --> 00:48:58,005 {\an1}Because the pandemic still rages across the country, 1023 00:48:58,071 --> 00:49:03,238 {\an1}many team members watch from the safety of home. 1024 00:49:03,305 --> 00:49:05,838 {\an1}YAZZIE: I'm feeling really nervous and excited. 1025 00:49:05,905 --> 00:49:07,738 {\an1}The past five years of my life 1026 00:49:07,805 --> 00:49:09,314 {\an1}has been spent working on this project. 1027 00:49:09,338 --> 00:49:11,738 {\an1}I wish someone could hold my hand. 1028 00:49:11,805 --> 00:49:14,471 BOSAK: Like everything in life, 1029 00:49:14,538 --> 00:49:16,138 you get up 1030 00:49:16,205 --> 00:49:18,538 {\an1}and there's no guarantee that your day will go well. 1031 00:49:18,605 --> 00:49:22,471 NARRATOR: 3:48 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. 1032 00:49:22,538 --> 00:49:27,571 {\an1}Perseverance begins its descent. 1033 00:49:27,638 --> 00:49:29,505 {\an1}MOHAN: We have confirmation of entry interface. 1034 00:49:29,571 --> 00:49:31,538 COOPER: As soon as the spacecraft 1035 00:49:31,605 --> 00:49:33,071 {\an1}hits the top of the atmosphere, 1036 00:49:33,138 --> 00:49:36,971 {\an1}it's minutes between that moment 1037 00:49:37,038 --> 00:49:39,838 {\an1}and landing on the surface of Mars. 1038 00:49:39,905 --> 00:49:42,805 {\an1}NARRATOR: Although there are cameras on board, 1039 00:49:42,871 --> 00:49:46,471 {\an1}the team can't see any imagery during landing. 1040 00:49:46,538 --> 00:49:51,005 {\an1}MOHAN: Navigation has confirmed that the parachute has deployed 1041 00:49:51,071 --> 00:49:53,205 {\an1}and we are seeing significant deceleration. 1042 00:49:53,271 --> 00:49:55,838 {\an1}The parachute has deployed. 1043 00:49:55,905 --> 00:49:58,238 TRUJILLO: When the parachutes opened, 1044 00:49:58,305 --> 00:50:01,338 {\an1}that's big, because you slow down a lot with that one. 1045 00:50:01,405 --> 00:50:03,605 {\an1}CHEN: Even though we're under a huge parachute, 1046 00:50:03,671 --> 00:50:06,671 {\an1}we're still descending at about 200 miles an hour. 1047 00:50:06,738 --> 00:50:08,314 {\an1}That's actually a little faster than, than I'd be going 1048 00:50:08,338 --> 00:50:09,514 {\an1}if I jumped out of a plane and dove headfirst 1049 00:50:09,538 --> 00:50:10,871 {\an1}without a parachute. 1050 00:50:10,938 --> 00:50:14,305 {\an1}MOHAN: Perseverance has now slowed to subsonic speeds 1051 00:50:14,371 --> 00:50:16,338 {\an1}and the heat shield has been separated. 1052 00:50:16,405 --> 00:50:18,538 CLARK: Once the heat shield falls away, 1053 00:50:18,605 --> 00:50:21,805 {\an1}our lander vision system is taking pictures of the surface, 1054 00:50:21,871 --> 00:50:23,738 {\an1}trying to figure out where it wants to land. 1055 00:50:23,805 --> 00:50:25,071 {\an1}We have ten seconds to do that. 1056 00:50:25,138 --> 00:50:27,971 {\an1}Things happen real fast after that. 1057 00:50:28,038 --> 00:50:32,171 {\an1}The vehicle drops itself into, like, free fall, 1058 00:50:32,238 --> 00:50:34,305 {\an1}turns on the retro-rockets. 1059 00:50:34,371 --> 00:50:36,871 MOHAN: Sky crane maneuver has started. 1060 00:50:36,938 --> 00:50:40,338 {\an1}The rover slowly was tethered down to the surface. 1061 00:50:40,405 --> 00:50:44,938 {\an1}It was an incredible, you know, few moments of anticipation. 1062 00:50:45,005 --> 00:50:47,305 {\an1}TRUJILLO: You want to hear it, you're waiting for it, 1063 00:50:47,371 --> 00:50:48,938 {\an1}and then they call it. 1064 00:50:49,005 --> 00:50:51,538 MOHAN: Touchdown confirmed. 1065 00:50:51,605 --> 00:50:54,938 {\an1}Perseverance safely on the surface of Mars. 1066 00:50:55,005 --> 00:50:56,871 Wow. Whew! 1067 00:50:56,938 --> 00:50:59,005 (cheering, Mohan continues) 1068 00:50:59,071 --> 00:51:02,605 BOSAK: Disbelief, excited. 1069 00:51:02,671 --> 00:51:04,638 {\an1}It is incredible. It is incredible. 1070 00:51:04,705 --> 00:51:06,905 Oh, my gosh. 1071 00:51:06,971 --> 00:51:10,071 (cheering) 1072 00:51:10,138 --> 00:51:11,138 Cheers. 1073 00:51:11,171 --> 00:51:12,538 (cheering) 1074 00:51:12,605 --> 00:51:15,138 {\an1}As I was celebrating, the image comes in. 1075 00:51:15,205 --> 00:51:16,905 {\an1}There's a picture! 1076 00:51:16,971 --> 00:51:19,205 TRUJILLO: I just could not believe it, 1077 00:51:19,271 --> 00:51:22,905 {\an1}that Mars was saying hello to Perseverance so quickly. 1078 00:51:22,971 --> 00:51:24,738 YAZZIE: You want to see the dirt, 1079 00:51:24,805 --> 00:51:27,105 {\an1}you want to see the dust on the wheels. 1080 00:51:27,171 --> 00:51:30,105 {\an1}It's real, it actually happened. 1081 00:51:30,171 --> 00:51:33,238 {\an1}I just want to hug somebody! 1082 00:51:33,305 --> 00:51:37,738 {\an1}NARRATOR: Later, actual video of the landing finally comes in. 1083 00:51:37,805 --> 00:51:42,571 {\an1}CLARK: This is just insanely awesome footage. 1084 00:51:42,638 --> 00:51:44,538 James Cameron, eat your heart out. 1085 00:51:44,605 --> 00:51:45,705 (laughs) 1086 00:51:47,805 --> 00:51:53,538 {\an1}Just to see how utterly amazing all of this engineering is, 1087 00:51:53,605 --> 00:51:56,905 {\an1}and all of the stuff that went into making this happen. 1088 00:51:56,971 --> 00:51:58,605 {\an1}The ones and zeros, 1089 00:51:58,671 --> 00:52:01,638 {\an1}and the forces and accelerations and rates, 1090 00:52:01,705 --> 00:52:02,971 {\an1}that doesn't really do justice. 1091 00:52:03,038 --> 00:52:06,038 {\an1}That sort of numerical purity doesn't do justice 1092 00:52:06,105 --> 00:52:08,405 {\an1}to all of the emotion and humanity 1093 00:52:08,471 --> 00:52:11,338 {\an1}that went into making something like this happen. 1094 00:52:13,705 --> 00:52:16,905 {\an1}TRUJILLO: We're not landing as a city or as a country, 1095 00:52:16,971 --> 00:52:19,271 {\an1}we're landing as the blue planet, right? 1096 00:52:19,338 --> 00:52:21,438 {\an1}And the blue planet is going to the red planet, 1097 00:52:21,505 --> 00:52:24,471 {\an1}and we're going to be exploring it together. 1098 00:52:32,071 --> 00:52:35,171 ♪ 1099 00:52:48,471 --> 00:52:51,171 {\an8}♪ 1100 00:53:03,905 --> 00:53:08,038 {\an7}To order this program on DVD, visit ShopPBS 1101 00:53:08,105 --> 00:53:11,405 {\an7}or call 1-800-PLAY-PBS. 1102 00:53:11,471 --> 00:53:14,171 {\an7}Episodes of "NOVA" are available with Passport. 1103 00:53:14,238 --> 00:53:18,338 {\an7}"NOVA" is also available on Amazon Prime Video. 1104 00:53:18,405 --> 00:53:21,305 {\an8}♪ 91415

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