The adult eroticism can be described best asIngenuity helicopter is too damaged to ever fly again. Yet before its final flight, NASA's historic Mars craft captured a sprawling view of the Martian desert.
In the aftermath of a "rough" landing during its 72nd flight, the small experimental chopper was left with at least one severely broken rotor, a tip potentially snapped off after crashing into the rocky ground. Yet on one of Ingenuity's final flights, flight 70, the NASA craft took in the scene you see below.
It's a vista of sprawling sand dunes. In the distance are rock-strewn ridges and mountains. And in the upper left corner you can spot the end of a helicopter leg.
SEE ALSO: NASA spacecraft keeps on going faster and faster and fasterIngenuity snapped this image from some 39 feet (12 meters) above the ground on Dec. 22, 2023. Its final flight would be less than a month later.
It turns out those picturesque, flowing Martian dunes were likely the cause of Ingenuity's demise. The helicopter navigated by using software to track the movement of objects, like rocks, below. But the sandy terrain was largely "featureless," the space agency explained.
"The more featureless the terrain is, the harder it is for Ingenuity to successfully navigate across it," NASA said in a statement. "The team believes that the relatively featureless terrain in this region was likely the root cause of the anomalous landing."
"That remarkable helicopter flew higher and farther than we ever imagined"
Still, the Ingenuity mission vastly overachieved over nearly three years of extraterrestrial flight. It became the first craft to ever make a powered, controlled flight on another planet. NASA engineers initially hoped the demonstration craft, with four-foot-long rotors, might prove flight was possible on Mars, perhaps flying five times. But it flew 72 times.
It was a scout. And a planetary explorer. The future exploration of Mars — and search for past Martian life — will almost certainly involve future aerial craft, and have Ingenuity to thank. After all, this persevering craft proved that flight on Mars, a world with a profoundly thin atmosphere, was possible.
"That remarkable helicopter flew higher and farther than we ever imagined and helped NASA do what we do best — make the impossible, possible," NASA administrator Bill Nelson said when announcing that Ingenuity had taken its final flight.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Draper vs. Kokkinakis 2025 livestream: Watch Australian Open for free
Early Oct. Prime Day gaming deals: PC discounts aplenty
Best Echo deals: Save up to 33% in October Prime Day
Everything you need to know about Amazon's October Prime Day sale
The Portable Workstation: Dell XPS 13 + 32 UltraSharp 4K Monitor
Shop early soundbar deals for October Prime Day
Patriots vs. Dolphins 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL for free
Best early October Prime Day mesh WiFi deals: Save up to $225 on Google Nest, Netgear
Then and Now: Six Generations of $200 Mainstream Radeon GPUs Compared
Best Amazon Music Unlimited deal: 4 months for free
Best Dyson deal: Save over $100 on Dyson V11 Origin cordless vacuum
Best Prime Video deal: Prime members can save up to 50% off movies and TV shows
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。