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♪
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NARRATOR:
February 18, 2021.
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Perseverance,
NASA's newest rover,
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{\an1}one of the most sophisticated
planetary probes ever built,
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{\an1}is approaching Mars
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{\an1}on an epic quest to hunt
for life beyond Earth.
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{\an1}SWATI MOHAN: We are under
a minute
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{\an1}from cruise stage separation.
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NARRATOR:
130 million miles away,
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{\an1}a team of researchers anxiously
waits...
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MOHAN:
Heading alignment.
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{\an1}NARRATOR: as Perseverance
attempts to land
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where no rover
has dared land before...
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Inside a crater
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{\an1}that might be filled
with ancient Martian life,
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{\an1}but is definitely filled
with cliffs
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and sand traps
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{\an1}where a rover can crash
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{\an1}or get stuck for good.
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AL CHEN:
We're heading toward the ground
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{\an1}at race car speeds.
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{\an1}So there's no way we're going
to joystick this down.
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{\an1}NARRATOR: For the first time in
the history of Mars exploration,
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{\an1}a rover is equipped with
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{\an1}the intelligence to try to steer
itself out of danger.
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{\an1}ELIO MORILLO: There's a very
specific timeline of events
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{\an1}that have to happen at the
correct time for
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{\an1}the entire process to succeed.
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{\an1}NARRATOR: Perseverance signals
its progress...
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MOHAN:
Sky crane maneuver has started.
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{\an1}NARRATOR: as the team
monitors every step.
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{\an1}If the rover manages to land in
one piece,
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{\an1}for about two years,
it will drill into Martian rock
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{\an1}that could hold evidence
of ancient life,
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{\an1}then collect samples
and store them.
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{\an1}JULIE TOWNSEND: For the first
time, we are going to collect
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{\an1}rock samples and bring them back
to Earth.
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{\an7}NARRATOR: In the future, another
rover will retrieve the samples
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{\an7}Perseverancecollects.
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{\an1}And through a series of
daring missions...
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{\an1}that sound more science fiction
than science fact...
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{\an1}the samples will be brought
to Earth,
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{\an1}where researchers
can examine them
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{\an1}in far greater detail.
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KENNDA LYNCH:
We have this amazing technology
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{\an1}that can really can get those
samples,
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{\an1}bring them back to Earth,
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{\an1}and do all the really cool
analysis
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{\an1}that we want to do here
on Earth.
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♪
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{\an1}This is a very, very large
undertaking
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{\an1}involving thousands and
thousands of people
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{\an1}from all over the world.
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NARRATOR:
Thousands of researchers
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{\an1}with one shared goal.
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{\an1}"Looking for Life on Mars,"
right now, on "NOVA."
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♪
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♪
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♪
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NARRATOR:
Did life ever exist on Mars?
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And if it did,
what would that mean for us?
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{\an1}JENNIFER EIGENBRODE:
How special is life on Earth?
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{\an1}Why do we not see it
on Mars today?
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{\an1}Did it ever evolve on Mars?
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♪
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{\an1}What does it take to get life
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{\an1}to evolve on a planet?
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♪
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DERRICK PITTS:
That question about life
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{\an1}is the one that really perplexes
and, I think, really drives us.
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♪
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{\an1}Something about our desire
to not be alone
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{\an1}keeps pushing us forward in the
search for life.
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{\an7}I like to call it
"CSI: Mars," right?
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{\an7}You know, it's, it's literally
this investigation
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{\an7}where you're finding all these
little clues
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{\an7}to put together your story.
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♪
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{\an1}NARRATOR: The tale of our
celestial neighbor, Mars.
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The red planet.
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{\an1}It captures the imagination.
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{\an1}Thousands of images paint
a picture
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{\an1}of a barren, alien world.
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{\an8}♪
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{\an7}At the same time,
there's something about Mars
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{\an1}that's strangely familiar.
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AARON YAZZIE
I was born on the Navajo Nation.
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{\an7}It's a high desert area
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{\an7}that actually has rolling
desert hills,
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{\an7}canyons, and rock formations,
and mountains,
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{\an7}and all of that looks like the
Martian landscape.
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{\an7}DIANA TRUJILLO: When I look at
the pictures of Mars,
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{\an7}I see the Mojave Desert, right?
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{\an7}Without the cactus.
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{\an1}But I can't tell the difference
if this image
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{\an1}is from the Mojave Desert
or if this is from Mars.
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{\an1}To me, it makes me want
to know more.
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{\an1}It makes me want to know,
you know, what happened to Mars,
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{\an1}or was there life there?
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{\an8}(whirring)
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{\an7}NARRATOR: Can the Perseverance
rover finally answer
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{\an8}this question?
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{\an7}We've been searching for the
remnants of life
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{\an7}on the red planet for decades,
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{\an7}from the Mariner orbiters
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{\an7}to the successful landings
of Viking 1and2...
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{\an7}...through the twin rovers
Spiritand Opportunity
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{\an7}that crisscrossed the planet.
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{\an7}MORILLO: We've been building
our knowledge
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{\an7}of the Martian environment
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{\an7}through so many decades
and so many achievements
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{\an7}from so many engineers
before us.
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NARRATOR:
But it was the discoveries
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{\an1}of the most cunning robotic
detective
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{\an1}to ever explore Mars,
a rover named Curiosity,
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{\an1}that set the stage for the
Perseverancemission.
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{\an1}September 14, 2012,
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{\an1}40 days after Curiosity
landed on Mars,
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{\an1}it stumbled upon the unexpected.
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{\an1}SANJEEV GUPTA: I remember the
moment those images came down.
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{\an1}We were all at the
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
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{\an7}at the time, and we were all
huddled
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{\an7}around a giant computer screen,
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{\an7}and, and I was just gazing at
this in astonishment,
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{\an8}because it's not
what we had expected.
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{\an8}EIGENBRODE:
We came across a whole bunch
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of cobbles,
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{\an1}and when we saw that,
everybody's jaw just dropped.
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{\an7}"Oh, my gosh, look at this,
this is perfect."
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{\an7}It is the classic example
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{\an7}of a river deposit.
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{\an1}Each one of those rocks,
they had to get bounced around
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{\an1}in some type of environment that
was going to turn them
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{\an1}from something that was chunky
and sharp and angular
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{\an1}to something that was rounded.
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Rivers do that.
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{\an7}Rivers on Earth do that
very well.
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{\an7}And so when we saw this, it was
our first evidence of a river.
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NARRATOR:
Evidence that water once flowed
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{\an1}on the surface of the
red planet.
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{\an1}On Earth, all life needs
water to thrive...
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{\an1}...from the giant blue whale
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{\an1}to tiny microbes.
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{\an1}GUPTA: The scientists on the
team have discovered
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{\an1}all these telltale signatures
in the rocks
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{\an1}that there were rivers
and ancient lakes that existed
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{\an1}for hundreds of thousands,
if not millions of years.
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HEATHER GRAHAM:
You can think of Mars
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{\an7}as... back in time, of course...
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{\an1}as being Earth's slightly
smaller, slightly colder sister.
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{\an1}GUPTA: Between 3.9 and 3.5
billion years ago,
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{\an1}we think that Mars was a warmer
and wetter place.
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{\an1}And what's interesting about
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{\an1}that is that's the same sort
of time interval
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{\an1}that life got going on Earth.
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{\an1}KEN FARLEY: We have two planets
with similar environments
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{\an1}at similar times.
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{\an7}One of them, on Earth,
is inhabited.
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{\an7}Why wouldn't we expect that the
one on Mars would be inhabited?
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{\an1}NARRATOR: Curiosityfound
evidence of a once-wet world.
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{\an1}But here on Earth,
for life to thrive,
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{\an1}it needs more than water.
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{\an1}It needs nutrients.
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EIGENBRODE:
We tend to simplify
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{\an1}that search for what type
of nutrients
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{\an1}as what we call CHNOPS.
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{\an1}When people say CHNOPS,
what they're saying is carbon...
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Hydrogen...
Nitrogen...
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Oxygen...
Phosphorus...
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Sulfur.
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{\an1}And we spell all those,
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{\an1}the first letter of
all those out,
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{\an1}it's called CHNOPS.
(laughs)
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NARRATOR:
These six elements make up
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{\an1}roughly 99% of the mass
of the human body.
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{\an1}In fact, they make up about
99% of the mass
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{\an1}of all living things.
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{\an1}If life, as we know it,
ever existed on Mars,
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{\an1}finding CHNOPS was key.
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{\an1}Could Curiosity, a laboratory
on wheels, find CHNOPS?
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{\an1}The rover scooped up samples
of Martian soil
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{\an1}to decode its chemical
composition.
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{\an1}EIGENBRODE: What we found was
a diverse chemistry
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{\an1}that included carbon, hydrogen,
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{\an7}some nitrogen, oxygen,
and sulfur,
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{\an7}and eventually we found
some phosphorus.
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{\an1}There's plenty of chemical
energy available for life,
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{\an1}if it had ever lived there.
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{\an1}That's really been
the big discovery
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{\an1}of the Curiosityrover mission.
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♪
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{\an1}NARRATOR: Curiosity found the
ingredients necessary for life
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{\an1}to emerge, but not life itself.
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{\an1}FARLEY: Curiosity has not, in
fact, detected evidence
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{\an1}for life, because it does not
have the instruments
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{\an1}designed for that purpose.
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{\an1}NARRATOR: Perseveranceis
designed to take the next step
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{\an1}in Mars exploration,
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{\an1}as it ventures into
unexplored territory
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{\an1}to search for samples
of Martian rock
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{\an1}in Jezero Crater.
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{\an7}If you want to set yourself up
for success
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{\an7}for finding ancient life,
that is the place to go.
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♪
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NARRATOR:
This orbital image reveals
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{\an1}what makes Jezero Crater
so intriguing.
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{\an1}KEN WILLIFORD: The key thing
that led us to Jezero
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{\an1}was this beautiful delta,
beautifully visible from orbit.
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{\an1}We think that delta must be
somewhere around
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{\an1}three billion years old
or older.
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{\an1}This delta sits at the end of a
beautifully expressed
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{\an1}sinuous river channel that came
in from the northwest,
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{\an7}flowing into the crater rim,
and filling up
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{\an1}Jezero Crater with a lake.
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{\an1}NARRATOR: On Earth, deltas form
where a river
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{\an1}and a larger body of water meet.
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{\an1}Sediment, brought in from the
river, drifts to the bottom.
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TANJA BOSAK:
The sediments that
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{\an7}the river carries are...
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{\an7}They really just fall out
and they settle down.
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♪
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{\an1}EIGENBRODE: It creates a mud
layer at the bottom.
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{\an1}Year after year after year after
year, it creates these.
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{\an7}NARRATOR: Take some of that
earthly delta mud,
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{\an7}put it under a microscope,
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{\an8}and you'll find
it's teeming with life.
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Tiny microbes,
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{\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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