
Copernical Team
'7 minutes of terror': Perserverance rover's nail-biting landing phase

Mars rover mission could drive research for decades to come

Was there ever life on Mars? NASA's Perseverance rover wants to find out

In tit-for-tat move, Russia denies visa to NASA envoy

NASA Mars rover Perseverance hits 'bullseye' for Thursday landing

NASA rover attempting most difficult Martian touchdown yet

Spacecraft aiming to land on Mars have skipped past the planet, burned up on entry, smashed into the surface, and made it down amid a fierce dust storm only to spit out a single fuzzy gray picture before dying.
Almost 50 years after the first casualty at Mars, NASA is attempting its hardest Martian touchdown yet.
The rover named Perseverance is headed Thursday for a compact 5-mile-by-4-mile (8-kilometer-by-6.4-kilometer) patch on the edge of an ancient river delta.
Russian cargo ship docks at International Space Station

Mars Relay Network connects Earth to NASA's robotic explorers

NASA's next Mars rover is ready for the most precise landing yet

What to expect when the Mars 2020 Perseverance rover arrives at the Red Planet on Feb. 18, 2021:
With about 2.4 million miles (3.9 million kilometers) left to travel in space, NASA's Mars 2020 Perseverance mission is days away from attempting to land the agency's fifth rover on the Red Planet.
Life as we do not know it: Astrobiology and the Mars 2020 mission

Life as we know it has never been found anywhere in our solar system or universe, other than on Earth. But that does not necessarily mean it is not out there.
The Mars 2020 mission is the first NASA mission with an explicit astrobiology component. Planned to be executed in multiple parts over decades, Mars 2020 and related missions aim to be the first to return samples of another planet for the purpose of examining them for signs of life.
But what do scientists hope to find? How will they know if or when they have found it? What does it mean for life on Earth if something is found, and what does it mean if it is not?