
Copernical Team
AFRL sponsorship recipient wins NASA space manufacturing contract

Vacuum soak for satellite brain

China's space tracking ship departs for 100th mission

OneWeb satellite to be deorbited at the end of its active lifetime

Commercial Space Exec: Hands-On Work Can Launch Careers

New meteor shower? How many meteors will I see, really?

Up, Up and Away - Sols 3487-3490

Why Did Mars Dry Out? New Study Points To Unusual Answers

NASA's Ingenuity Mars Helicopter captures video of record flight

Imagery has come down from Mars capturing a recent flight in which the rotorcraft flew farther and faster than ever before.
The Ingenuity Mars Helicopter's black-and-white navigation camera has provided dramatic video of its record-breaking 25th flight, which took place on April 18. Covering a distance of 2,310 feet (704 meters) at a speed of 12 mph (5.5 meters per second), it was the Red Planet rotorcraft's longest and fastest flight to date. (Ingenuity is currently preparing for its 29th flight.)
"For our record-breaking flight, Ingenuity's downward-looking navigation camera provided us with a breathtaking sense of what it would feel like gliding 33 feet above the surface of Mars at 12 miles per hour," said Ingenuity team lead Teddy Tzanetos of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.
The first frame of the video clip begins about one second into the flight. After reaching an altitude of 33 feet (10 meters), the helicopter heads southwest, accelerating to its maximum speed in less than three seconds. The rotorcraft first flies over a group of sand ripples then, about halfway through the video, several rock fields.
Ingenuity Mars Helicopter captures video of record flight
