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NASA will share the first video of Mars taken by Perseverance

2021-02-22T18:46:27.332Z


Get ready to see the first video of Mars, courtesy of NASA's Perseverance rover, and possibly the first sound.


Check out the new images from Perseverance 0:52

(CNN) -

Get ready to see the first video of Mars, courtesy of NASA's Perseverance rover, and possibly the first sound.


The agency will share the video captured by the rover's cameras, which will show the perspective of a spacecraft landing on Mars for the first time.

The press conference will air live on NASA's website at 2 p.m. ET.

Although previous spacecraft have sent "movies," which are really just stitched images in GIF form, Perseverance has cameras with video capabilities.

In total, the rover has 23 cameras, which also include zoom and color functions.

LOOK: The Ingenuity helicopter, traveling companion of the Perseverance rover, calls home from Mars

The video may include audio captured by one of the rover's two microphones, which was turned on to hear entry, descent, and landing sounds.

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The rover and its attached helicopter, named Ingenuity, landed on Mars on Thursday, February 18.

After landing, the rover transmitted data and images using NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which has been circling the planet since 2006.

The first black-and-white images of the rover's landing site were available almost immediately.

Last Friday the first color images were shared.

LOOK: Look at the peculiar way that Google celebrates the landing of the Perseverance rover

Never-before-seen images of Mars

The rover sent out a never-before-seen view: what it looks like to land on Mars.

This image is one of the video that will be shared on Monday.

The first image shared during a NASA press conference on Friday was "stimulating" for the team when they received it, said Pauline Hwang, the rover's strategic mission manager.


Shows the rover approaching the Martian surface during entry, descent, and landing.

A camera on the spacecraft's descent stage captured the perspective, something not possible on previous missions.

Every picture tells a story.

This one captures me in midair, floating over Mars while hanging from my parachute during the final #CountdownToMars.

Latest update and images: https://t.co/fnnEOOMWsV pic.twitter.com/39aGp963a3

- NASA's Perseverance Mars Rover (@NASAPersevere) February 19, 2021

"This shot of a camera on my jetpack captures me in the air, just before my wheels landed," according to a tweet on the Twitter account Perseverance.

“The moment my team has dreamed of for years is now a reality.

Dare to powerful things ».

LOOK: NASA celebrates the Perseverance landing with images of the surface of Mars

Tiny plumes of dust can be seen rising from the Martian surface, stirred up by the engines landing the rover when it was within a few meters of touching the surface.

"The team is overwhelmed with excitement and joy to have successfully landed another rover on the surface of Mars," said Adam Steltzner, the rover's chief engineer.

"When we make such investments, we make them for humanity, and we make them as a gesture of our humanity."

Color images available Friday show the characteristic red color of the Martian surface.

«An open horizon, with much to explore.

Can't wait to get started, ”Perseverance's account tweeted.

Hispanics behind the Perseverance of Mars 4:43

Rocks are also seen strewn across the flat surface of the Jezero crater landing site, but they are small compared to the rover's large wheels.

Another tweet with the image read: 'I love rocks.

Look at them right next to my wheel.

Are they volcanic or sedimentary?

What story do they tell?

I can't wait to find out.

The HiRISE camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which flew over the landing site as Perseverance approached to dock, captured an incredible sight as the spacecraft's parachutes were opened.

Source: cnnespanol

All news articles on 2021-02-22

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