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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:11,160 --> 00:00:14,239 Right now, that rover, Perseverance, 2 00:00:14,240 --> 00:00:18,358 is 200 million miles away, on the surface of Mars. 3 00:00:18,359 --> 00:00:22,238 It's on the floor of Jezero Crater, and it's taking the images 4 00:00:22,239 --> 00:00:24,638 and collecting the samples that might tell us 5 00:00:24,639 --> 00:00:27,759 whether life ever existed on the Red Planet. 6 00:00:35,198 --> 00:00:40,677 Jezero Crater is one of the most important and enigmatic sites 7 00:00:40,678 --> 00:00:42,118 in the solar system. 8 00:00:43,917 --> 00:00:46,196 Around 3.8 billion years ago 9 00:00:46,197 --> 00:00:48,077 it was filled with a lake. 10 00:00:50,797 --> 00:00:53,716 But that lake is long gone. 11 00:00:53,717 --> 00:00:56,516 Mars has become a dry and barren world. 12 00:01:02,756 --> 00:01:07,235 Today, Perseverance and the Ingenuity helicopter 13 00:01:07,236 --> 00:01:10,074 are searching the crater for signs of the life 14 00:01:10,075 --> 00:01:11,835 that may once have lived there. 15 00:01:13,195 --> 00:01:17,554 What they find could transform our understanding of life - 16 00:01:17,555 --> 00:01:21,074 on Earth and throughout the universe. 17 00:01:22,994 --> 00:01:26,633 It is certainly the most audacious mission 18 00:01:26,634 --> 00:01:29,713 ever sent to the surface of another world. 19 00:01:29,714 --> 00:01:32,593 TDL, this is mission. I have you five by five. How read? 20 00:01:32,594 --> 00:01:34,393 I have you five by, as well. 21 00:01:35,393 --> 00:01:38,513 This is a crucial seven days for the rover... 22 00:01:39,673 --> 00:01:43,273 ..and I've been given extraordinary access to the Perseverance mission. 23 00:01:46,552 --> 00:01:50,071 I'll be following the rover's every move 24 00:01:50,072 --> 00:01:54,312 as it attempts to travel further and faster than ever before. 25 00:01:57,432 --> 00:01:59,470 Through its cameras, 26 00:01:59,471 --> 00:02:02,511 we'll show you what it's like to stand on... 27 00:02:04,191 --> 00:02:06,831 ..and explore the surface of another world. 28 00:02:14,550 --> 00:02:17,069 This week, we'll see the Red Planet 29 00:02:17,070 --> 00:02:19,230 as no-one has seen it before. 30 00:02:50,547 --> 00:02:55,066 This is Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, 31 00:02:55,067 --> 00:03:00,827 4,800 Oak Grove Drive, Pasadena, California. 32 00:03:06,666 --> 00:03:10,185 From the 1960s onwards, it's been the control centre 33 00:03:10,186 --> 00:03:14,104 for Nasa's pioneering deep space missions, 34 00:03:14,105 --> 00:03:17,504 and now it's the headquarters for the hundreds of scientists 35 00:03:17,505 --> 00:03:20,025 and engineers who make up the Perseverance team. 36 00:03:22,185 --> 00:03:27,503 JPL is a really special place for me because, way back in 1980, 37 00:03:27,504 --> 00:03:29,823 I wrote to them because I was interested 38 00:03:29,824 --> 00:03:33,543 in the exploration of the planets, and they wrote back! 39 00:03:33,544 --> 00:03:34,663 And this is it. 40 00:03:34,664 --> 00:03:37,583 Imagine the excitement when this brown envelope arrived 41 00:03:37,584 --> 00:03:41,262 from California, filled with images of the solar system, 42 00:03:41,263 --> 00:03:45,102 the moons of Jupiter, and the rings of Saturn. 43 00:03:45,103 --> 00:03:49,462 This is one of the reasons I became a physicist. 44 00:03:49,463 --> 00:03:52,301 Well, now, 40 years later, 45 00:03:52,302 --> 00:03:56,301 I'm actually at JPL because, as I speak, 46 00:03:56,302 --> 00:04:00,141 there is a rover roving across the Martian surface - 47 00:04:00,142 --> 00:04:05,060 the first mission dedicated to the search for life on Mars. 48 00:04:05,061 --> 00:04:07,300 And this week, we have unique access, 49 00:04:07,301 --> 00:04:08,780 not only to Mission Control, 50 00:04:08,781 --> 00:04:11,980 but also to the navigators who are plotting the path 51 00:04:11,981 --> 00:04:14,980 of Perseverance around the boulders 52 00:04:14,981 --> 00:04:17,419 and the mountains of Mars. 53 00:04:17,420 --> 00:04:19,819 And we're also going to see the photographs, 54 00:04:19,820 --> 00:04:21,539 the data come down in real time. 55 00:04:21,540 --> 00:04:24,259 We're going to learn things about Mars that nobody 56 00:04:24,260 --> 00:04:26,020 has ever known before. 57 00:04:27,540 --> 00:04:28,700 Can't wait. 58 00:04:33,819 --> 00:04:37,018 Just over a year ago, the world held its breath 59 00:04:37,019 --> 00:04:38,939 as the Perseverance rover... 60 00:04:40,899 --> 00:04:43,977 ..the flagship of the Mars 2020 mission, 61 00:04:43,978 --> 00:04:46,258 made its final approach towards Mars. 62 00:04:48,298 --> 00:04:50,257 After seven years of development 63 00:04:50,258 --> 00:04:52,257 and a six-month journey, 64 00:04:52,258 --> 00:04:55,896 no-one knew if the 2.7 billion dollar rover 65 00:04:55,897 --> 00:04:58,337 would make it safely onto the surface. 66 00:05:10,456 --> 00:05:13,575 Since then, Perseverance has been exploring the area 67 00:05:13,576 --> 00:05:17,175 around its landing site in Jezero Crater, 68 00:05:17,176 --> 00:05:20,335 sending back the most extraordinary images. 69 00:05:30,015 --> 00:05:33,453 With the exception of the occasional animation, 70 00:05:33,454 --> 00:05:35,853 every image of Mars in this programme 71 00:05:35,854 --> 00:05:39,093 has been captured by the cameras on Perseverance, 72 00:05:39,094 --> 00:05:41,694 or the other spacecraft around Mars. 73 00:05:47,853 --> 00:05:52,973 Perseverance's mission is to search for signs of long-extinct life. 74 00:05:54,853 --> 00:05:56,332 What it discovers 75 00:05:56,333 --> 00:05:59,332 could answer one of the great existential questions... 76 00:06:02,612 --> 00:06:04,932 ..are we alone in the universe? 77 00:06:16,571 --> 00:06:19,850 This is JPL's Space Flight Operations Facility 78 00:06:19,851 --> 00:06:23,089 or, better, Mission Control. 79 00:06:23,090 --> 00:06:28,569 And this room is iconic for anyone that's into space flight, 80 00:06:28,570 --> 00:06:32,249 because this is the room in which all those dramatic moments 81 00:06:32,250 --> 00:06:34,529 that we all remember happened. 82 00:06:34,530 --> 00:06:37,048 The dive of Cassini into Saturn, 83 00:06:37,049 --> 00:06:39,048 the landing of Curiosity, 84 00:06:39,049 --> 00:06:41,088 and Perseverance on Mars. 85 00:06:41,089 --> 00:06:43,768 They're talking now to the solar system, 86 00:06:43,769 --> 00:06:45,608 anything that's out there. 87 00:06:45,609 --> 00:06:50,008 This is where all the data comes down from the Perseverance Rover. 88 00:06:56,208 --> 00:06:59,047 TDL, this is five by, I have you five by. 89 00:06:59,048 --> 00:07:00,647 I have you five by, as well. 90 00:07:03,047 --> 00:07:05,766 This morning, the crew in Mission Control are waiting 91 00:07:05,767 --> 00:07:07,926 to hear from Perseverance, 92 00:07:07,927 --> 00:07:12,927 which is currently 200 million miles away on the surface of Mars. 93 00:07:14,126 --> 00:07:18,725 To find out how communication works across such vast distances, 94 00:07:18,726 --> 00:07:21,405 I've come to see Rick Welch. 95 00:07:21,406 --> 00:07:24,405 So this room, sometimes, we call the centre of the universe. 96 00:07:24,406 --> 00:07:26,564 This is where all the data comes to this facility 97 00:07:26,565 --> 00:07:28,604 from all our spacecraft out in the solar system. 98 00:07:28,605 --> 00:07:31,084 So you can see up on the screen the different antenna. 99 00:07:31,085 --> 00:07:33,804 We actually have antennas at three locations around the Earth, 100 00:07:33,805 --> 00:07:36,484 which allow us to really look out and see spacecraft, no matter 101 00:07:36,485 --> 00:07:38,203 what planet they happen to be at. 102 00:07:38,204 --> 00:07:39,283 How does that work? 103 00:07:39,284 --> 00:07:42,203 Because Mars is... What is it? About 200 million miles away, 104 00:07:42,204 --> 00:07:43,923 give or take, at the moment. 105 00:07:43,924 --> 00:07:48,483 Right now, as you said, we're about 300 million kilometres away, 106 00:07:48,484 --> 00:07:51,082 and it's probably about 16 minutes to get our signal 107 00:07:51,083 --> 00:07:52,362 all the way to Mars, one way. 108 00:07:52,363 --> 00:07:54,802 So compare that to the moon. It only takes a couple of seconds 109 00:07:54,803 --> 00:07:56,682 for a signal to get back and forth to the moon. 110 00:07:56,683 --> 00:07:58,242 So even when we had astronauts there, 111 00:07:58,243 --> 00:08:00,562 it seemed like we could talk back and forth in real time. 112 00:08:00,563 --> 00:08:02,922 You know, 16 minutes is really too long to do any kind 113 00:08:02,923 --> 00:08:04,562 of real-time communication. 114 00:08:05,562 --> 00:08:09,121 This delay in communication between Earth and Mars 115 00:08:09,122 --> 00:08:12,681 determines so much of how the mission operates. 116 00:08:12,682 --> 00:08:16,400 Because the team are unable to control the rover in real time, 117 00:08:16,401 --> 00:08:19,440 they must compile detailed sets of instructions to send 118 00:08:19,441 --> 00:08:21,481 to Perseverance every day. 119 00:08:22,961 --> 00:08:24,960 So the scientists and engineers here on Earth 120 00:08:24,961 --> 00:08:28,000 spend about eight hours deciding the next things for the rover to do, 121 00:08:28,001 --> 00:08:31,359 and building the commands. We then send that up in the Martian morning. 122 00:08:31,360 --> 00:08:33,799 The rover is on its own to execute those the best it can. 123 00:08:33,800 --> 00:08:35,799 And then we hear back in the Martian afternoon 124 00:08:35,800 --> 00:08:37,239 what actually happened on Mars. 125 00:08:37,240 --> 00:08:40,439 Oh, so that says, "Next UHF two hours." 126 00:08:40,440 --> 00:08:42,638 So is that... is that what that means? That's right. 127 00:08:42,639 --> 00:08:45,198 So we're very interested in getting our downlink today to see 128 00:08:45,199 --> 00:08:46,318 how the rover is doing. 129 00:08:46,319 --> 00:08:49,759 And that will be arriving here in about two hours. 130 00:08:50,759 --> 00:08:53,599 While the crew in Mission Control wait... 131 00:08:54,798 --> 00:08:57,317 ..Perseverance is uploading its latest data 132 00:08:57,318 --> 00:08:59,998 to one of several spacecraft in orbit around Mars. 133 00:09:02,398 --> 00:09:07,117 That spacecraft will relay the data back to Earth in two hours' time... 134 00:09:12,597 --> 00:09:15,917 ..which gives me time to explore the JPL campus. 135 00:09:21,156 --> 00:09:26,315 JPL is set in a beautiful location in the mountains around Pasadena. 136 00:09:26,316 --> 00:09:28,755 It's about ten miles from Los Angeles. 137 00:09:28,756 --> 00:09:31,035 And there's a reason that it's here, 138 00:09:31,036 --> 00:09:34,834 isolated, because it began life as a rocket test facility. 139 00:09:34,835 --> 00:09:37,514 And the thing about rockets when you're testing them, 140 00:09:37,515 --> 00:09:39,155 is that sometimes they explode. 141 00:09:40,395 --> 00:09:44,793 But in the 1950s, this became the centre of America's exploration 142 00:09:44,794 --> 00:09:48,633 of the solar system and beyond, and the first American satellite, 143 00:09:48,634 --> 00:09:52,113 Explorer 1, was built and controlled from here, 144 00:09:52,114 --> 00:09:54,753 as were all those things I grew up with - 145 00:09:54,754 --> 00:09:59,552 Voyager, Cassini, and now, the latest, Perseverance. 146 00:09:59,553 --> 00:10:03,873 And in here, in the Mars yard, we're going to meet its twin. 147 00:10:19,752 --> 00:10:22,030 This is Optimism. 148 00:10:22,031 --> 00:10:24,790 Engineers like their acronyms, so that actually stands 149 00:10:24,791 --> 00:10:29,590 for Operational Perseverance Twin with the Integration of Mechanisms 150 00:10:29,591 --> 00:10:31,711 and Instruments Sent to Mars. 151 00:10:33,751 --> 00:10:38,029 But it is, in every important way, an exact engineering replica 152 00:10:38,030 --> 00:10:39,989 of Perseverance. 153 00:10:39,990 --> 00:10:41,829 There are a few things missing. 154 00:10:41,830 --> 00:10:44,709 For instance, on Earth, it's not safe for the rover to be powered 155 00:10:44,710 --> 00:10:49,588 by nuclear battery, so instead it's plugged into the mains. 156 00:10:49,589 --> 00:10:52,228 But, for example, it has exactly the same 157 00:10:52,229 --> 00:10:54,068 flight computers as Perseverance. 158 00:10:54,069 --> 00:10:57,988 So if they want to upload new software, then they upload 159 00:10:57,989 --> 00:11:01,547 it to that first, and test it to make sure it works. 160 00:11:01,548 --> 00:11:05,747 And it's quite an imposing thing, isn't it? 161 00:11:05,748 --> 00:11:07,988 It's bigger than I thought. 162 00:11:13,627 --> 00:11:18,866 Weighing over a ton on Earth, and standing just over two metres tall, 163 00:11:18,867 --> 00:11:20,387 the rover is a beast. 164 00:11:22,827 --> 00:11:25,905 And it's packed with instruments designed to scrutinise 165 00:11:25,906 --> 00:11:27,346 the Martian surface. 166 00:11:29,666 --> 00:11:33,186 Among them are 19 cameras, more than any other spacecraft. 167 00:11:34,826 --> 00:11:38,664 Five are mounted at the top of the mast 168 00:11:38,665 --> 00:11:41,704 to give a human-like eye-level view 169 00:11:41,705 --> 00:11:43,545 of the Martian landscape. 170 00:11:45,985 --> 00:11:50,224 Lower down, cameras focus on the area in front of the rover... 171 00:11:52,584 --> 00:11:57,063 ..where the robot arm is deployed to study and sample the surface, 172 00:11:57,064 --> 00:11:58,944 looking for signs of life. 173 00:12:02,783 --> 00:12:05,662 In just over a year, the rover's cameras have sent 174 00:12:05,663 --> 00:12:08,383 over 200,000 images back to Earth. 175 00:12:27,222 --> 00:12:29,620 This morning, the latest batch of photos 176 00:12:29,621 --> 00:12:33,260 are just about to arrive at JPL... 177 00:12:33,261 --> 00:12:36,260 ..and I'm going to look at them with the leader of the science team, 178 00:12:36,261 --> 00:12:38,141 Ken Farley. 179 00:12:39,141 --> 00:12:43,459 So here we have one of the images that just came down from Mars today, 180 00:12:43,460 --> 00:12:47,299 and it's a great landscape looking off to the north and east 181 00:12:47,300 --> 00:12:48,459 in Jezero Crater. 182 00:12:48,460 --> 00:12:53,138 Yeah. And do you still get excited by the idea that nobody's ever seen 183 00:12:53,139 --> 00:12:56,578 this planet from this angle before? It's completely new data. 184 00:12:56,579 --> 00:12:58,498 How could you not? I mean, this is just... 185 00:12:58,499 --> 00:13:02,578 I love it. This is... Every day, to be able to take in a landscape 186 00:13:02,579 --> 00:13:06,017 like this and be surprised by things that we see. 187 00:13:06,018 --> 00:13:08,897 Still exciting to see it every day. 188 00:13:08,898 --> 00:13:13,217 Can you describe what we're seeing in this image? In the foreground, 189 00:13:13,218 --> 00:13:17,297 you see the area that we've been exploring for most of the last year. 190 00:13:17,298 --> 00:13:18,856 That's the crater floor. 191 00:13:18,857 --> 00:13:22,456 And then the thing that just captures everybody's attention, 192 00:13:22,457 --> 00:13:23,896 including mine, is the delta. 193 00:13:23,897 --> 00:13:27,016 And the delta is very distinctive and it's got a flat top. 194 00:13:27,017 --> 00:13:29,056 You can see the flat top on the left side. Yeah. 195 00:13:29,057 --> 00:13:31,096 That's about 40 metres high. 196 00:13:33,016 --> 00:13:37,615 The delta is the most important feature in Jezero Crater, 197 00:13:37,616 --> 00:13:41,016 and it's the reason Perseverance was sent here. 198 00:13:42,536 --> 00:13:46,694 It was formed at the mouth of a river that flowed into the lake 199 00:13:46,695 --> 00:13:48,735 that once filled the crater. 200 00:13:49,775 --> 00:13:52,574 The delta's layers of sedimentary rock 201 00:13:52,575 --> 00:13:55,134 are thought to be the most likely place to find evidence 202 00:13:55,135 --> 00:13:58,094 of the life that may once have lived on Mars. 203 00:14:00,214 --> 00:14:03,613 And it's where the rover is headed to next. 204 00:14:03,614 --> 00:14:06,813 We are just about to embark on about a five-kilometre drive 205 00:14:06,814 --> 00:14:09,932 to get to the Delta. We would love to just go straight there. 206 00:14:09,933 --> 00:14:12,492 It's only about two kilometres, two and a half kilometres 207 00:14:12,493 --> 00:14:15,532 as the crow flies. But there are boulders in the foreground 208 00:14:15,533 --> 00:14:18,732 and, in the middle distance, that you can't easily see in this image, 209 00:14:18,733 --> 00:14:21,291 there are sand dunes, so we have to go all the way around 210 00:14:21,292 --> 00:14:22,571 to get there. 211 00:14:22,572 --> 00:14:23,811 You don't want to get stuck. 212 00:14:23,812 --> 00:14:27,292 We absolutely do not want to get stuck. That would be bad. 213 00:14:37,331 --> 00:14:41,610 Well, we've arrived at an extremely exciting time 214 00:14:41,611 --> 00:14:43,330 for Perseverance on Mars. 215 00:14:43,331 --> 00:14:46,729 For the last year, it's been exploring this region around here, 216 00:14:46,730 --> 00:14:49,769 but now it's going to set off to its primary target, 217 00:14:49,770 --> 00:14:52,489 here in the ancient river delta. 218 00:14:52,490 --> 00:14:56,089 Now, it can't, or they don't want to, take the direct route, 219 00:14:56,090 --> 00:14:58,649 because that would be through this rocky dune field. 220 00:14:58,650 --> 00:15:02,048 It would take a long time, might even be dangerous for the rover. 221 00:15:02,049 --> 00:15:05,048 And so what will be happening this week is it's going to head off 222 00:15:05,049 --> 00:15:08,128 about, hopefully, 200 or 300 metres a day 223 00:15:08,129 --> 00:15:10,088 driving in this direction. 224 00:15:10,089 --> 00:15:11,807 And then, by the end of the week - 225 00:15:11,808 --> 00:15:13,927 I really am looking forward to this - 226 00:15:13,928 --> 00:15:17,767 it's going to thread its way, we think, around the side 227 00:15:17,768 --> 00:15:21,807 of this crater. It looks quite nasty from the air, but they say 228 00:15:21,808 --> 00:15:23,367 that it's certainly passable. 229 00:15:23,368 --> 00:15:27,886 And so, if we're lucky, then Perseverance will be around here, 230 00:15:27,887 --> 00:15:30,447 at the end of our week here at JPL. 231 00:15:35,487 --> 00:15:39,485 Over the next week, I'll follow the rover's every move as it starts 232 00:15:39,486 --> 00:15:41,966 the most important drive of its mission so far. 233 00:15:44,606 --> 00:15:46,605 To cover the 1,200 metres 234 00:15:46,606 --> 00:15:49,644 to La Orotava crater in just seven days, 235 00:15:49,645 --> 00:15:54,604 the rover will need to break all distance and driving records. 236 00:15:54,605 --> 00:15:58,884 No rover has gone so far across the surface of another planet 237 00:15:58,885 --> 00:16:00,805 in such a short space of time. 238 00:16:04,724 --> 00:16:07,643 We're hoping that journey will start today, 239 00:16:07,644 --> 00:16:09,443 but first we need to be sure 240 00:16:09,444 --> 00:16:12,363 the rover is ready to move on. 241 00:16:12,364 --> 00:16:13,683 This is where it happens. 242 00:16:13,684 --> 00:16:16,682 So Rick is taking me to the daily briefing meeting, 243 00:16:16,683 --> 00:16:18,603 on the rover operations floor. 244 00:16:19,843 --> 00:16:22,002 Coming in to the Perseverance Operation Facility, 245 00:16:22,003 --> 00:16:24,362 we have this great selfie of the rover, 246 00:16:24,363 --> 00:16:26,083 which is awesome to see. 247 00:16:27,482 --> 00:16:28,961 And this picture is actually taken 248 00:16:28,962 --> 00:16:30,761 with a camera at the end of the robotic arm. 249 00:16:30,762 --> 00:16:34,041 So if you were the rover, it's taking over 50 different pictures 250 00:16:34,042 --> 00:16:36,202 to actually build this mosaic. 251 00:16:37,842 --> 00:16:40,800 I remember one of your engineers actually saying that it behaved 252 00:16:40,801 --> 00:16:42,440 like one of his teenagers would, 253 00:16:42,441 --> 00:16:45,560 because it landed and the first thing it did was take a selfie. 254 00:16:45,561 --> 00:16:47,161 Exactly. Exactly. 255 00:16:55,440 --> 00:17:00,119 This maze of rooms is the beating heart of the mission. 256 00:17:00,120 --> 00:17:03,919 It's usually strictly off-limits to outsiders, 257 00:17:03,920 --> 00:17:07,479 but today I've been given special clearance to join the team inside. 258 00:17:09,439 --> 00:17:11,598 So this is one of our big operations room. 259 00:17:11,599 --> 00:17:14,158 We call this the Mission Support Area or MSA. 260 00:17:14,159 --> 00:17:16,559 And this is where our data comes. 261 00:17:23,758 --> 00:17:26,198 Our tactical downlink lead today is Keith. 262 00:17:32,997 --> 00:17:35,596 He's actually checking in with all the team members, 263 00:17:35,597 --> 00:17:37,756 all our engineering and science members to make sure 264 00:17:37,757 --> 00:17:38,797 they can hear him. 265 00:17:42,636 --> 00:17:45,875 This is the team's chance to check on the status of the rover, 266 00:17:45,876 --> 00:17:49,556 and this morning it seems all is not well. 267 00:18:00,275 --> 00:18:03,154 Occasionally, we do need to say, we see some issue with this system. 268 00:18:03,155 --> 00:18:05,754 And so let's preclude use of that for tomorrow, 269 00:18:05,755 --> 00:18:07,793 until we have more time to look at it. 270 00:18:07,794 --> 00:18:10,273 Yeah, I think he said, didn't he, that the drill had paused. 271 00:18:10,274 --> 00:18:12,513 Monday, we'll be looking... 272 00:18:12,514 --> 00:18:15,833 Before it's even started its record-breaking drive, 273 00:18:15,834 --> 00:18:19,673 the rover is facing a problem that could delay its progress. 274 00:18:19,674 --> 00:18:21,353 And it stems from this. 275 00:18:23,033 --> 00:18:26,592 The last task in its investigation of the crater floor was to take 276 00:18:26,593 --> 00:18:28,672 a rock sample from this boulder, 277 00:18:28,673 --> 00:18:30,713 informally known as Sid. 278 00:18:34,992 --> 00:18:37,311 So what have we got? 279 00:18:37,312 --> 00:18:39,551 This is a very interesting image, 280 00:18:39,552 --> 00:18:43,191 because we are trying to take a core sample of this rock. 281 00:18:43,192 --> 00:18:46,110 And the rock was too hard 282 00:18:46,111 --> 00:18:48,190 and the coring faulted. 283 00:18:48,191 --> 00:18:51,230 It stopped with the drill still stuck in the rocks. 284 00:18:51,231 --> 00:18:52,630 It's not supposed to be like that. 285 00:18:52,631 --> 00:18:54,870 I suppose you don't want to break a drill bit, right? 286 00:18:54,871 --> 00:18:57,630 That's exactly right. If the rock is too hard, 287 00:18:57,631 --> 00:18:59,509 you start to dull the drill bit, 288 00:18:59,510 --> 00:19:02,749 and we have a small number of drill bits and once they're all dull, 289 00:19:02,750 --> 00:19:04,749 we're not going to be collecting any more rocks. 290 00:19:04,750 --> 00:19:07,550 So we are very careful not to push the drill too hard. 291 00:19:09,750 --> 00:19:12,148 And while the drill is stuck in the rock, 292 00:19:12,149 --> 00:19:14,149 the rover can't go anywhere. 293 00:19:15,429 --> 00:19:17,628 This is what it's like on a rover mission. 294 00:19:17,629 --> 00:19:20,148 Every day, there's something new that you have to deal with. 295 00:19:20,149 --> 00:19:22,428 So what do you do? We're asking for a core 296 00:19:22,429 --> 00:19:24,867 that was about six centimetres long, 297 00:19:24,868 --> 00:19:27,907 and we know it got to five centimetres before it faulted. 298 00:19:27,908 --> 00:19:30,027 So five centimetres - good enough. 299 00:19:30,028 --> 00:19:32,227 So you don't care about the extra centimetre. 300 00:19:32,228 --> 00:19:33,987 You just want to get that core... Right. 301 00:19:33,988 --> 00:19:37,306 We've decided that the best thing to do was to simply snap 302 00:19:37,307 --> 00:19:39,146 off this core from the rock, 303 00:19:39,147 --> 00:19:42,067 and ingest it into the rover and seal it. 304 00:19:45,707 --> 00:19:49,425 As our first day at JPL ends, the instructions telling the rover 305 00:19:49,426 --> 00:19:52,785 to break off the sample and withdraw the drill, 306 00:19:52,786 --> 00:19:56,586 are sent to the Deep Space Network, and onwards to Mars. 307 00:19:58,186 --> 00:20:01,985 We won't know if it's been a success until we return. 308 00:20:14,904 --> 00:20:17,864 Our fascination with Mars is nothing new. 309 00:20:22,024 --> 00:20:27,022 We know now that, in the early years of the 20th century, this world 310 00:20:27,023 --> 00:20:31,343 was being watched closely by intelligences greater than man's. 311 00:20:38,343 --> 00:20:41,461 Stories of Martian visitors were once a staple 312 00:20:41,462 --> 00:20:42,942 of cinema and radio. 313 00:20:44,182 --> 00:20:47,661 And at the time, those stories didn't seem as far-fetched 314 00:20:47,662 --> 00:20:48,902 as they do today. 315 00:20:51,981 --> 00:20:56,860 Intellects vast cool and unsympathetic, 316 00:20:56,861 --> 00:21:00,940 regarded this Earth with envious eyes, 317 00:21:00,941 --> 00:21:03,701 and slowly and surely drew their plans against us. 318 00:21:08,460 --> 00:21:11,539 It's hard to believe today, but a century ago - actually, 319 00:21:11,540 --> 00:21:15,339 as recently as the 1930s - it was perfectly respectable 320 00:21:15,340 --> 00:21:18,859 to imagine that there was a civilisation on Mars. 321 00:21:24,939 --> 00:21:26,059 Gee-whiz. 322 00:21:27,099 --> 00:21:30,777 Invaders from Mars, weird, fantastic beings 323 00:21:30,778 --> 00:21:34,577 of a superintelligence, ruling a race of synthetic humans 324 00:21:34,578 --> 00:21:38,458 and pitting them against mankind's dream to conquer the universe. 325 00:21:40,018 --> 00:21:45,016 They were beings as intelligent or even more intelligent than us, 326 00:21:45,017 --> 00:21:47,336 staring down at Earth. 327 00:21:47,337 --> 00:21:50,576 This could be the beginning of the end for the human race. 328 00:21:50,577 --> 00:21:53,696 For what men first thought were meteors, or the often-ridiculed 329 00:21:53,697 --> 00:21:57,775 flying saucers are, in reality, the flaming vanguard 330 00:21:57,776 --> 00:21:59,656 of the invasion from Mars. 331 00:22:01,736 --> 00:22:05,615 Even into the 1950s, it was reasonable to think that Mars 332 00:22:05,616 --> 00:22:07,334 was covered in vegetation. 333 00:22:07,335 --> 00:22:11,534 And the reason is that until the space age, 334 00:22:11,535 --> 00:22:15,654 this was the best photograph we had of Mars. 335 00:22:15,655 --> 00:22:18,774 This is from the 100-inch telescope at Mount Wilson. 336 00:22:18,775 --> 00:22:22,413 And these dark markings on the surface, which move around, 337 00:22:22,414 --> 00:22:26,413 actually, or appear to, as the months pass and the seasons change, 338 00:22:26,414 --> 00:22:29,374 look for all the world like vegetation. 339 00:22:30,614 --> 00:22:36,572 This is a book written by the great Patrick Moore in the 1950s. 340 00:22:36,573 --> 00:22:38,892 It's titled A Guide to Mars. 341 00:22:38,893 --> 00:22:41,012 And in the chapter called Life on Mars, 342 00:22:41,013 --> 00:22:43,292 Patrick Moore writes this, 343 00:22:43,293 --> 00:22:48,011 "To sum up, there is no reason to suppose that low forms 344 00:22:48,012 --> 00:22:50,891 "of vegetation may not exist on Mars, 345 00:22:50,892 --> 00:22:55,052 "whilst there is a great deal of evidence that they do." 346 00:22:58,571 --> 00:23:01,651 But that changed with the dawn of the space age. 347 00:23:09,331 --> 00:23:14,170 In November 1964, Nasa launched Mariner 4 towards Mars... 348 00:23:17,090 --> 00:23:21,529 ..on a mission to return the first close-up images of the planet. 349 00:23:21,530 --> 00:23:24,528 The spacecraft is flying toward Mars, about to pass 350 00:23:24,529 --> 00:23:26,929 within 6,000 miles of its surface. 351 00:23:28,529 --> 00:23:32,929 Back at JPL, they waited anxiously as the data trickled in. 352 00:23:35,368 --> 00:23:38,007 This would be the first time we'd seen the surface 353 00:23:38,008 --> 00:23:43,008 of another planet and, potentially, signs of extraterrestrial life. 354 00:23:48,767 --> 00:23:53,526 But all that emerged was a barren, crater-scarred world, 355 00:23:53,527 --> 00:23:57,487 with no sign of life and certainly no Martians. 356 00:24:08,926 --> 00:24:13,405 On August 20th 1975, the first Viking spaceship was launched. 357 00:24:19,885 --> 00:24:22,004 Subsequent missions revealed the planet 358 00:24:22,005 --> 00:24:24,604 in greater and greater detail, 359 00:24:24,605 --> 00:24:27,004 hinting at a very different past. 360 00:24:29,804 --> 00:24:33,483 By the mid-1970s, the Viking missions had discovered 361 00:24:33,484 --> 00:24:37,003 great river valleys, proof that large amounts of water 362 00:24:37,004 --> 00:24:39,003 had flowed across the Martian surface. 363 00:24:44,403 --> 00:24:47,282 To investigate that history of water, 364 00:24:47,283 --> 00:24:50,881 a string of rovers were sent to explore the surface. 365 00:24:50,882 --> 00:24:55,522 They discovered a very different world to the Mars we see today. 366 00:24:56,722 --> 00:24:59,121 There was evidence that, in the past, 367 00:24:59,122 --> 00:25:03,001 Mars was covered in lakes and even oceans. 368 00:25:03,002 --> 00:25:07,521 On Earth, we know that wherever we find water, we find life. 369 00:25:09,321 --> 00:25:13,400 This all suggests that even if Mars is a dead world today, 370 00:25:13,401 --> 00:25:15,601 it may not always have been so. 371 00:25:19,920 --> 00:25:22,079 In just 50 years, 372 00:25:22,080 --> 00:25:26,759 we've come full circle, from Mariner 4 apparently suggesting 373 00:25:26,760 --> 00:25:28,319 that Mars is a dead world, 374 00:25:28,320 --> 00:25:31,878 to believing again that it is certainly possible 375 00:25:31,879 --> 00:25:34,838 that life may have existed at some point 376 00:25:34,839 --> 00:25:36,558 in the history of the Red Planet. 377 00:25:36,559 --> 00:25:40,999 And now it's up to Perseverance to see if that's true. 378 00:26:05,717 --> 00:26:11,995 Day two at JPL, and I return to Mission Control 379 00:26:11,996 --> 00:26:14,596 to see the new data that Perseverance has sent back. 380 00:26:18,756 --> 00:26:23,634 Ken. So, last time we spoke, the drill bit was stuck in the rock. 381 00:26:23,635 --> 00:26:25,274 So what happened? 382 00:26:25,275 --> 00:26:30,314 Well, we have this image of a beautiful rock in the drill bit. 383 00:26:30,315 --> 00:26:34,473 So now we know, just from this image alone, that the drill was able 384 00:26:34,474 --> 00:26:37,713 to break off the rock core and pull out. 385 00:26:37,714 --> 00:26:38,873 So that one's been solved. 386 00:26:38,874 --> 00:26:40,953 The sample's safely stowed away. 387 00:26:40,954 --> 00:26:42,953 So what's the plan today? 388 00:26:42,954 --> 00:26:45,912 Well, that was the last thing we had to do to complete 389 00:26:45,913 --> 00:26:47,952 the crater floor campaign, 390 00:26:47,953 --> 00:26:50,952 and we are ready to begin the drive campaign. 391 00:26:50,953 --> 00:26:55,393 So the main activity for the next few weeks is drive, drive, drive. 392 00:26:58,872 --> 00:27:02,791 With the time lost to the drilling fault, Perseverance will now 393 00:27:02,792 --> 00:27:05,871 have to average 200 metres a day 394 00:27:05,872 --> 00:27:08,271 if it is to reach La Orotava Crater 395 00:27:08,272 --> 00:27:09,831 by the end of the week. 396 00:27:12,071 --> 00:27:14,070 But the pictures from its cameras 397 00:27:14,071 --> 00:27:17,790 showed that it's starting from a tricky position, 398 00:27:17,791 --> 00:27:21,111 surrounded by a maze of rocks and sand traps. 399 00:27:24,630 --> 00:27:26,709 To find its way onto clearer ground, 400 00:27:26,710 --> 00:27:29,869 Perseverance is going to need help. 401 00:27:29,870 --> 00:27:33,709 Vandi Verma is head of the Rover Driving Team. 402 00:27:33,710 --> 00:27:35,988 Hello, Vandi. Hi. Nice to meet you. 403 00:27:35,989 --> 00:27:40,588 So you're about to set off on the journey, the long journey 404 00:27:40,589 --> 00:27:41,948 around to the delta. 405 00:27:41,949 --> 00:27:45,908 So how do you plan the next route? 406 00:27:45,909 --> 00:27:48,747 So we look at the images. So I would look at these 407 00:27:48,748 --> 00:27:53,067 navigation camera images I took in the direction we expect to drive. 408 00:27:53,068 --> 00:27:56,427 And we turn these 3D goggles on. 409 00:27:56,428 --> 00:27:59,906 If I put it into stereo so you can yourself see it... 410 00:27:59,907 --> 00:28:02,506 Oh, that really is quite impressive, actually. 411 00:28:02,507 --> 00:28:05,706 I can see the surface of Mars coming out from the screen. 412 00:28:05,707 --> 00:28:09,746 And you can see a curved ripple here, with the rocks on it. 413 00:28:09,747 --> 00:28:13,425 It's a really good substitute for standing where the rover is 414 00:28:13,426 --> 00:28:15,945 on Mars, and kind of looking out to see 415 00:28:15,946 --> 00:28:17,786 how you would navigate the terrain. 416 00:28:19,986 --> 00:28:24,345 Using the 3D images, Vandi can begin to plot Perseverance's route 417 00:28:24,346 --> 00:28:26,304 through the obstacles. 418 00:28:26,305 --> 00:28:29,744 Essentially, we are saying we want to navigate around this area, 419 00:28:29,745 --> 00:28:32,464 so we are doing the path so it goes around this. 420 00:28:32,465 --> 00:28:34,464 But we don't want to go over here, 421 00:28:34,465 --> 00:28:37,064 because it's very sandy, and sand, actually, 422 00:28:37,065 --> 00:28:39,023 the wheels don't do very well in. Ah, yeah. 423 00:28:39,024 --> 00:28:41,383 You can see all the layers as you start... 424 00:28:41,384 --> 00:28:43,903 In hazardous terrain like this, 425 00:28:43,904 --> 00:28:46,863 the only way the rover can safely find its way 426 00:28:46,864 --> 00:28:49,904 is by following Vandi's carefully plotted route. 427 00:28:52,543 --> 00:28:55,822 But this mode of rover driving is slow. 428 00:28:55,823 --> 00:28:57,542 It's only possible to programme 429 00:28:57,543 --> 00:29:00,342 around 30 metres of driving each day, 430 00:29:00,343 --> 00:29:03,781 nowhere near enough to cover the distances required 431 00:29:03,782 --> 00:29:05,621 to reach the delta. 432 00:29:05,622 --> 00:29:08,301 So once the rover reaches safer ground, 433 00:29:08,302 --> 00:29:10,661 Vandi points it in the right direction 434 00:29:10,662 --> 00:29:12,742 and activates its secret weapon. 435 00:29:13,822 --> 00:29:15,900 So, now we're going to turn on AutoNav, 436 00:29:15,901 --> 00:29:17,780 because the rover will know more on Mars 437 00:29:17,781 --> 00:29:19,301 at that point than we know here. 438 00:29:26,341 --> 00:29:30,619 AutoNav allows the rover to drive itself across open terrain 439 00:29:30,620 --> 00:29:34,379 where there are fewer obstacles to avoid, 440 00:29:34,380 --> 00:29:38,539 analysing the stereo images from its cameras in real time 441 00:29:38,540 --> 00:29:40,340 to pick a route across the surface. 442 00:29:49,259 --> 00:29:51,098 For a demonstration of how it works, 443 00:29:51,099 --> 00:29:52,498 I'm back in the Mars yard 444 00:29:52,499 --> 00:29:56,298 to meet the Perseverance project manager, Jennifer Trosper. 445 00:29:58,418 --> 00:30:01,057 So I was told we have to wear these coats. 446 00:30:01,058 --> 00:30:02,857 I thought it was for my safety, 447 00:30:02,858 --> 00:30:05,776 but I'm told it's for its safety, to protect it from me. 448 00:30:05,777 --> 00:30:07,216 It is, it is. Static. Yes. 449 00:30:07,217 --> 00:30:10,896 And that's why I'm hooking up right here, so that I don't zap 450 00:30:10,897 --> 00:30:13,056 any of the electronics. 451 00:30:13,057 --> 00:30:16,696 So, if I were to sit here - and I can't believe I'm saying this - 452 00:30:16,697 --> 00:30:19,375 but if I sit down, will she recognise me? 453 00:30:19,376 --> 00:30:21,775 Because of how well it's working on Mars, 454 00:30:21,776 --> 00:30:24,175 I wouldn't expect it to run over you, 455 00:30:24,176 --> 00:30:25,815 but we could give it a try. 456 00:30:25,816 --> 00:30:27,455 Let's check it out. Let's have a go. 457 00:30:27,456 --> 00:30:30,175 I love the words that you... "She should." 458 00:30:30,176 --> 00:30:32,814 No, she will. "What should happen..." 459 00:30:32,815 --> 00:30:34,894 She's... Really, just... 460 00:30:34,895 --> 00:30:37,414 I mean, if I just sit here... 461 00:30:37,415 --> 00:30:38,855 All right. 462 00:30:45,014 --> 00:30:49,573 As I settle down for this game of interplanetary chicken, 463 00:30:49,574 --> 00:30:52,533 the first thing that becomes evident is that Optimism 464 00:30:52,534 --> 00:30:55,613 is more of a tortoise than hare. 465 00:30:55,614 --> 00:31:00,252 This is top speed, 4.2 centimetres a second 466 00:31:00,253 --> 00:31:03,413 or just under one mile every ten hours. 467 00:31:06,133 --> 00:31:09,731 I'd like to say it's nerve-racking but, in all honesty, 468 00:31:09,732 --> 00:31:11,612 I could definitely get out of the way. 469 00:31:13,172 --> 00:31:15,131 As the rover drives forwards, 470 00:31:15,132 --> 00:31:17,771 it's constantly imaging the ground in front, 471 00:31:17,772 --> 00:31:20,331 building a map of the obstacles that it will 472 00:31:20,332 --> 00:31:23,411 need to avoid - in this case, me. 473 00:31:27,491 --> 00:31:31,250 She's just taking some more images to update her nav map. 474 00:31:31,251 --> 00:31:33,530 Then she has to decide how to get around you. 475 00:31:33,531 --> 00:31:35,169 So it should be identifying... 476 00:31:35,170 --> 00:31:39,649 There you go. Looks like she has identified you as an obstacle 477 00:31:39,650 --> 00:31:41,449 and is choosing to turn. 478 00:31:41,450 --> 00:31:44,529 So it looks like she's not going to drive over you. 479 00:31:44,530 --> 00:31:45,570 It does. 480 00:31:47,049 --> 00:31:51,608 Although the wheels are slightly resetting towards me. 481 00:31:51,609 --> 00:31:54,089 She's going to make a close pass, I think. 482 00:32:03,528 --> 00:32:05,208 Oh, excellent. 483 00:32:06,448 --> 00:32:09,008 It's gone straight over the GoPro. 484 00:32:13,487 --> 00:32:15,766 So she was very careful with me, 485 00:32:15,767 --> 00:32:17,807 but not so careful with our cameras. 486 00:32:22,207 --> 00:32:25,165 The thing that's impressive is that nobody's driving. 487 00:32:25,166 --> 00:32:28,525 So even though it doesn't look like it's driving fast, 488 00:32:28,526 --> 00:32:32,085 you've got to remember that she's driving across unknown terrain, 489 00:32:32,086 --> 00:32:33,405 making her own decisions. 490 00:32:33,406 --> 00:32:38,164 And this makes this rover, Perseverance, by far the fastest 491 00:32:38,165 --> 00:32:41,005 thing we've ever sent to the surface of any other planet. 492 00:32:42,765 --> 00:32:47,284 It's this unique set of skills that allows the rover to travel 493 00:32:47,285 --> 00:32:49,045 200 to 300 metres every day. 494 00:32:52,204 --> 00:32:55,763 And if Perseverance is going to make it to La Orotava Crater 495 00:32:55,764 --> 00:32:58,404 by the end of the week, it'll need to go flat out. 496 00:33:01,764 --> 00:33:06,082 At the end of day two, I head back to the rover operations floor, 497 00:33:06,083 --> 00:33:09,562 where Vandi and the rover driving team should have finished the plans 498 00:33:09,563 --> 00:33:12,043 for the first stage of that drive. 499 00:33:13,643 --> 00:33:16,041 So when the rover's route has been planned, 500 00:33:16,042 --> 00:33:19,801 then those instructions have first of all got to be checked 501 00:33:19,802 --> 00:33:22,561 and amalgamated in with all the other instructions 502 00:33:22,562 --> 00:33:25,761 to all the instruments on the rover. So what's the arm going to do? 503 00:33:25,762 --> 00:33:27,560 What are the experiments going to do? 504 00:33:27,561 --> 00:33:29,560 Where are the cameras going to be looking? 505 00:33:29,561 --> 00:33:32,600 And those sequences, those commands, are all put together 506 00:33:32,601 --> 00:33:34,840 in this meeting, which is called the cam meeting, 507 00:33:34,841 --> 00:33:36,320 the command approval meeting. 508 00:33:36,321 --> 00:33:39,560 And only when everybody's happy, and all those commands 509 00:33:39,561 --> 00:33:42,799 have been sent to simulators - twice, actually - 510 00:33:42,800 --> 00:33:45,319 that check that everything's going to be OK, 511 00:33:45,320 --> 00:33:49,639 can those commands be signed off and sent to the Deep Space Network, 512 00:33:49,640 --> 00:33:51,760 and onwards to the rover on Mars. 513 00:33:55,399 --> 00:33:57,998 In here, the team are putting together the final list 514 00:33:57,999 --> 00:34:00,438 of instructions that will determine exactly 515 00:34:00,439 --> 00:34:02,079 what the rover does tomorrow. 516 00:34:03,799 --> 00:34:05,997 There are thousands of lines of code 517 00:34:05,998 --> 00:34:08,518 and each one must be scrutinised. 518 00:34:09,558 --> 00:34:12,277 A single bug in the software could jeopardise 519 00:34:12,278 --> 00:34:14,278 the carefully plotted drive plan. 520 00:34:18,437 --> 00:34:21,436 What we do after we finish on this shift is we really celebrate 521 00:34:21,437 --> 00:34:24,276 the effort that everybody put together, and we actually hit 522 00:34:24,277 --> 00:34:27,276 the gong behind me, that we would love for you to do it today. 523 00:34:27,277 --> 00:34:29,276 Really? Because that is the tremendous honour. 524 00:34:29,277 --> 00:34:30,795 Am I supposed to say something? 525 00:34:30,796 --> 00:34:32,475 "I declare this meeting closed." 526 00:34:32,476 --> 00:34:34,316 That sounds about right to me. 527 00:34:39,036 --> 00:34:40,915 And with that bang of the gong, 528 00:34:40,916 --> 00:34:45,115 the instructions are sent off on their long journey to Mars. 529 00:34:48,395 --> 00:34:51,274 All being well, the rover should receive them 530 00:34:51,275 --> 00:34:52,994 and finally be able to start 531 00:34:52,995 --> 00:34:55,594 on its record-breaking journey in the morning. 532 00:35:06,714 --> 00:35:10,233 Perseverance has already changed the way we look at the Red Planet. 533 00:35:12,513 --> 00:35:15,232 The photos it takes can be stitched together 534 00:35:15,233 --> 00:35:17,993 into astonishing panoramas. 535 00:35:20,912 --> 00:35:25,032 Scenes that let us stand on the surface of another world. 536 00:35:26,952 --> 00:35:31,872 It is a stark and barren landscape, dimmer than the Earth. 537 00:35:32,872 --> 00:35:35,830 Because it's farther from the sun, less than half the amount 538 00:35:35,831 --> 00:35:38,151 of sunlight reaches the surface. 539 00:35:39,991 --> 00:35:43,350 But, in some ways, it looks remarkably familiar. 540 00:35:43,351 --> 00:35:46,309 There are sand dunes and boulder fields that could have been 541 00:35:46,310 --> 00:35:49,949 photographed in deserts here on Earth. 542 00:35:49,950 --> 00:35:53,270 There are even clouds in the orange-coloured skies. 543 00:35:57,830 --> 00:36:03,148 And because Perseverance is the only Martian rover to carry microphones, 544 00:36:03,149 --> 00:36:06,109 we can hear the sounds of Mars for the first time. 545 00:36:08,349 --> 00:36:11,347 The whistling of the wind 546 00:36:11,348 --> 00:36:15,028 that stirs up the dust devils that ghost across the surface. 547 00:36:19,828 --> 00:36:23,786 Perseverance has even observed a solar eclipse, 548 00:36:23,787 --> 00:36:27,667 as Mars's moon Phobos passes in front of the sun. 549 00:36:30,387 --> 00:36:34,066 But although there are undoubted similarities to the Earth, 550 00:36:34,067 --> 00:36:36,906 Mars is also a very alien world. 551 00:36:37,986 --> 00:36:40,505 Because it's half the diameter of our planet, 552 00:36:40,506 --> 00:36:44,226 gravity on the surface is just 38% as strong. 553 00:36:46,786 --> 00:36:49,864 And while the Earth is wet, warm and welcoming, 554 00:36:49,865 --> 00:36:53,025 Mars is a desolate, inhospitable place. 555 00:36:55,225 --> 00:36:58,904 Its dusty surface is bone dry, and covered by a thin 556 00:36:58,905 --> 00:37:03,464 carbon dioxide atmosphere just 1% the density of Earth's. 557 00:37:05,464 --> 00:37:09,944 The average temperature is -63 degrees Celsius. 558 00:37:11,704 --> 00:37:14,623 It is cold, dry and dead. 559 00:37:16,503 --> 00:37:20,063 This is the world that Perseverance is exploring. 560 00:37:39,981 --> 00:37:43,701 Day three, and it's an early start at JPL. 561 00:37:51,620 --> 00:37:53,300 Just see it there. 562 00:37:55,500 --> 00:37:57,619 So coincidentally, early morning at JPL, 563 00:37:57,620 --> 00:38:00,979 we've just walked into Mission Control, 564 00:38:00,980 --> 00:38:05,258 and that bright point of light in the sky there, Venus, 565 00:38:05,259 --> 00:38:09,138 and just below it, you can just see this faint red pixel 566 00:38:09,139 --> 00:38:11,018 in the morning sky. 567 00:38:11,019 --> 00:38:12,939 That's Mars. 568 00:38:15,179 --> 00:38:16,817 In the brightening sky, 569 00:38:16,818 --> 00:38:19,258 Mars is too faint for our cameras. 570 00:38:22,858 --> 00:38:26,137 But somewhere out there, Perseverance will hopefully 571 00:38:26,138 --> 00:38:28,978 have just completed the first stage of its drive. 572 00:38:32,177 --> 00:38:33,976 So how did the drive go yesterday? 573 00:38:33,977 --> 00:38:37,736 It looks like it went well, but we really can't tell yet. 574 00:38:37,737 --> 00:38:41,416 The data comes down in bits and pieces, and right now 575 00:38:41,417 --> 00:38:44,775 we have an image that was taken in the late afternoon 576 00:38:44,776 --> 00:38:49,095 at about the time I would expect the drive to stop. 577 00:38:49,096 --> 00:38:52,535 This is looking forward, and if we look backward, 578 00:38:52,536 --> 00:38:54,414 we should be able to see the rover tracks. 579 00:38:54,415 --> 00:38:56,374 So now we're looking back the way we came. 580 00:38:56,375 --> 00:39:00,214 So it looks just as you would expect if it had executed its full drive. 581 00:39:00,215 --> 00:39:01,614 That's interesting, actually, 582 00:39:01,615 --> 00:39:06,414 if you go back to that one, it's just so obvious when you say it. 583 00:39:06,415 --> 00:39:09,853 You can tell it's late afternoon because of the long shadows on Mars. 584 00:39:09,854 --> 00:39:11,373 Yeah, it's like Earth, you know, 585 00:39:11,374 --> 00:39:14,214 it's not surprising. You figure it out. Of course. Yeah. 586 00:39:16,054 --> 00:39:19,852 When the telemetry from the rover returns to Earth, 587 00:39:19,853 --> 00:39:22,853 it shows exactly how well the rover has fared on its drive. 588 00:39:26,093 --> 00:39:29,372 To start off, it follows Vandi's route through the treacherous 589 00:39:29,373 --> 00:39:31,213 sand patches and boulders. 590 00:39:33,652 --> 00:39:37,611 And then, as the AutoNav takes over, the rover swings north 591 00:39:37,612 --> 00:39:40,772 and drives itself towards La Orotava Crater. 592 00:39:43,212 --> 00:39:47,850 Covering a total distance of 204 metres 593 00:39:47,851 --> 00:39:49,811 and 96 centimetres. 594 00:39:52,571 --> 00:39:54,611 It's a great start to the journey. 595 00:39:59,010 --> 00:40:01,129 But after this initial success, 596 00:40:01,130 --> 00:40:04,450 the team are now facing an enforced change of plan. 597 00:40:05,730 --> 00:40:08,809 Tomorrow, the mission will temporarily lose access 598 00:40:08,810 --> 00:40:10,689 to the Deep Space Network. 599 00:40:12,449 --> 00:40:15,048 For 24 hours, they will not be able to communicate 600 00:40:15,049 --> 00:40:16,809 with the rover on Mars. 601 00:40:18,129 --> 00:40:21,168 So to keep up with the schedule, they've been forced into 602 00:40:21,169 --> 00:40:23,088 a risky change of strategy. 603 00:40:25,168 --> 00:40:29,127 So we're making a two-day drive plan, because tomorrow 604 00:40:29,128 --> 00:40:32,887 we don't have access to the antennas that communicate with the rover. 605 00:40:32,888 --> 00:40:35,486 So we send two days' worth of instructions and just let 606 00:40:35,487 --> 00:40:38,326 the rover do its thing and we get a day off. 607 00:40:38,327 --> 00:40:41,606 So how far would you hope to get? About 500 metres. 608 00:40:41,607 --> 00:40:44,807 Oh, really? Yeah, that's... That'll be a big jump. 609 00:40:46,647 --> 00:40:49,205 Today, they will be doing a two-stop plan. 610 00:40:49,206 --> 00:40:51,885 So when you're doing your assessment today, let's make sure 611 00:40:51,886 --> 00:40:55,965 that everything is green and go for these activities 612 00:40:55,966 --> 00:40:57,646 that will be coming up. 613 00:40:59,766 --> 00:41:02,364 Now, we just heard that the plan for the next two days 614 00:41:02,365 --> 00:41:04,644 is for Perseverance to do a two-day drive. 615 00:41:04,645 --> 00:41:08,324 And as I speak, you can see there, Canberra Deep Space Network 616 00:41:08,325 --> 00:41:12,044 antennae 35, there's communication upwards to MRO. 617 00:41:12,045 --> 00:41:13,883 That's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. 618 00:41:13,884 --> 00:41:16,523 So those are probably the instructions that are going 619 00:41:16,524 --> 00:41:20,844 to Perseverance to tell it what to do on that two-day drive. 620 00:41:22,724 --> 00:41:25,962 As the commands hurtle their way towards Mars, 621 00:41:25,963 --> 00:41:29,043 I want to find out how Perseverance got to Jezero Crater. 622 00:41:35,283 --> 00:41:38,681 Jezero is the most dangerous location that NASA has ever 623 00:41:38,682 --> 00:41:41,002 tried to land a spacecraft on Mars. 624 00:41:44,122 --> 00:41:47,402 It is full of hazards that could be fatal to the mission. 625 00:41:50,122 --> 00:41:53,240 But if there's one place to come to find the engineers who could 626 00:41:53,241 --> 00:41:57,441 pull off this feat of precision landing, it's JPL. 627 00:42:01,121 --> 00:42:05,199 And this is JPL's motto, Dare Mighty Things. 628 00:42:05,200 --> 00:42:08,999 And JPL lives up, definitely, to that motto, 629 00:42:09,000 --> 00:42:12,759 as you can see from this award cabinet, the trophy cabinet. 630 00:42:12,760 --> 00:42:15,679 And it's just a history of space exploration. For anyone who's 631 00:42:15,680 --> 00:42:18,678 interested in our exploration of the universe, 632 00:42:18,679 --> 00:42:21,438 then this is just magnificent. 633 00:42:21,439 --> 00:42:23,918 You see awards for Voyager, 634 00:42:23,919 --> 00:42:26,078 Mars Exploration Rovers, 635 00:42:26,079 --> 00:42:30,997 the Dawn Mission, Cassini, just everything. 636 00:42:30,998 --> 00:42:34,077 What's that one up there? That's quite ornate, isn't it? 637 00:42:34,078 --> 00:42:37,237 Appreciation for your support and participation 638 00:42:37,238 --> 00:42:42,557 in The American Space Experience at Disneyland. 639 00:42:48,157 --> 00:42:51,756 Upstairs from the trophy cabinet is the office of Al Chen, 640 00:42:51,757 --> 00:42:55,595 the engineer who was in charge of designing the entry, descent 641 00:42:55,596 --> 00:42:58,195 and landing system that would allow Perseverance 642 00:42:58,196 --> 00:42:59,916 to touch down in Jezero. 643 00:43:01,996 --> 00:43:04,955 The scientists tell us about, you know, the potential for life there. 644 00:43:04,956 --> 00:43:07,554 But when we look at it from a landing perspective, 645 00:43:07,555 --> 00:43:09,874 all you can see are the ways we're going to die there. 646 00:43:09,875 --> 00:43:12,914 The death that's out there. It's a site unlike any other place 647 00:43:12,915 --> 00:43:14,154 we've tried to land on Mars. 648 00:43:14,155 --> 00:43:16,634 It's just got hazards all over the place. 649 00:43:16,635 --> 00:43:19,633 If we turn on the slope hazards here, you see the edge of the delta, 650 00:43:19,634 --> 00:43:21,113 which is that 60 metre-ish cliff. 651 00:43:21,114 --> 00:43:22,873 And then, of course, the edges of craters, 652 00:43:22,874 --> 00:43:24,673 and those are places we don't want to land. 653 00:43:24,674 --> 00:43:25,873 But of course, that's not it. 654 00:43:25,874 --> 00:43:27,993 These are all the rocks that we could see from space, 655 00:43:27,994 --> 00:43:30,833 which means about a half metre tall or so, or more. 656 00:43:30,834 --> 00:43:33,312 If you manage to encounter one of those red places, 657 00:43:33,313 --> 00:43:35,232 you're very likely to have a bad day. 658 00:43:35,233 --> 00:43:38,712 So those blue areas, they're the safe areas. That's right. 659 00:43:38,713 --> 00:43:42,673 When I look at that, it looks like mainly hazard to me. 660 00:43:45,592 --> 00:43:49,311 Al's job was to design a system that would allow Perseverance 661 00:43:49,312 --> 00:43:54,152 to identify and then land in one of the safe areas near the delta. 662 00:44:04,631 --> 00:44:08,430 But the first time his landing system could be fully tested 663 00:44:08,431 --> 00:44:11,230 was on February the 18th, 2021... 664 00:44:16,470 --> 00:44:20,589 ..as the spacecraft approached Mars at the end of its six-month journey. 665 00:44:20,590 --> 00:44:22,229 You are not triggered for talk. 666 00:44:30,749 --> 00:44:33,788 It's kind of weird to have the only test that you ever get a chance 667 00:44:33,789 --> 00:44:37,107 to do, you know, in front of everybody else in the world, right? 668 00:44:37,108 --> 00:44:38,547 Definitely, my heart was racing. 669 00:44:38,548 --> 00:44:40,988 I probably didn't want to know what my blood pressure was. 670 00:44:42,708 --> 00:44:45,667 As the spacecraft makes its final approach, 671 00:44:45,668 --> 00:44:49,187 it's travelling at 20,000km per hour. 672 00:44:55,307 --> 00:44:58,906 The job of Al's entry, descent and landing system is to slow 673 00:44:58,907 --> 00:45:02,826 it down to walking pace by the time it reaches the surface. 674 00:45:09,786 --> 00:45:12,424 Because of the delay in communication with Mars, 675 00:45:12,425 --> 00:45:14,665 the whole process is automated. 676 00:45:15,825 --> 00:45:20,345 All the crew in Mission Control can do is watch and wait. 677 00:45:21,625 --> 00:45:24,425 They call it the seven minutes of terror. 678 00:45:28,944 --> 00:45:30,663 In the first stage of the descent, 679 00:45:30,664 --> 00:45:34,144 the spacecraft skims across the top of the Martian atmosphere. 680 00:45:36,704 --> 00:45:39,502 Even though it's much thinner than the Earth's, the friction 681 00:45:39,503 --> 00:45:43,583 is immense, causing the spacecraft's heat shield to glow red-hot. 682 00:45:57,222 --> 00:45:59,661 After four minutes, the spacecraft has slowed 683 00:45:59,662 --> 00:46:01,822 to 1,500 kilometres an hour. 684 00:46:03,061 --> 00:46:06,261 It's now just 11km above the planet's surface. 685 00:46:10,101 --> 00:46:12,740 Filmed with the lander's cameras, 686 00:46:12,741 --> 00:46:15,779 this is the actual video of the parachute deploying 687 00:46:15,780 --> 00:46:17,660 in the Martian atmosphere. 688 00:46:21,700 --> 00:46:23,819 As the heat shield falls away, 689 00:46:23,820 --> 00:46:28,738 the unique artificial intelligence system Al designed kicks in. 690 00:46:28,739 --> 00:46:32,058 Its job is to scan the ground below and identify 691 00:46:32,059 --> 00:46:33,539 a safe landing zone. 692 00:46:38,979 --> 00:46:41,338 2km above the surface... 693 00:46:45,058 --> 00:46:47,537 ..the parachute is released 694 00:46:47,538 --> 00:46:50,057 and the eight lander rockets fire up 695 00:46:50,058 --> 00:46:52,898 to steer the craft towards its chosen landing site. 696 00:46:58,097 --> 00:47:01,337 And then the most nerve-racking moment. 697 00:47:07,296 --> 00:47:11,455 The rover is lowered the last few metres on cables, 698 00:47:11,456 --> 00:47:14,136 touching down in a swirl of Martian dust. 699 00:47:26,135 --> 00:47:29,734 Where did Perseverance choose to come down? 700 00:47:29,735 --> 00:47:32,973 Perseverance came down in the Seitah area, so we ended up kind of 701 00:47:32,974 --> 00:47:36,053 down in this region right about here. 702 00:47:36,054 --> 00:47:37,933 You can see the hazards that are out there. 703 00:47:37,934 --> 00:47:41,013 But you can see that the area right around the rover is nice and clean. 704 00:47:41,014 --> 00:47:43,973 It's the parking lot we were looking for. 705 00:47:47,373 --> 00:47:50,932 The first pictures taken by Perseverance on the surface 706 00:47:50,933 --> 00:47:53,573 showed just how precise the landing was. 707 00:47:56,372 --> 00:48:00,331 It had picked out a tiny area of flat ground in a landscape filled 708 00:48:00,332 --> 00:48:02,412 with boulders and sand dunes. 709 00:48:05,812 --> 00:48:09,970 But this landscape was not always so dry and dusty. 710 00:48:09,971 --> 00:48:11,571 It was once submerged. 711 00:48:16,451 --> 00:48:18,490 About 3.8 billion years ago, 712 00:48:18,491 --> 00:48:21,929 Jezero Crater was filled with water, 713 00:48:21,930 --> 00:48:24,850 forming a lake 45km across. 714 00:48:31,330 --> 00:48:34,929 On Earth, we always find life where there's water. 715 00:48:36,249 --> 00:48:38,688 If the same is true on Mars, 716 00:48:38,689 --> 00:48:40,768 then life could have existed 717 00:48:40,769 --> 00:48:45,248 in Jezero Lake at almost exactly the same time 718 00:48:45,249 --> 00:48:47,568 that it was evolving on Earth. 719 00:48:57,448 --> 00:48:59,646 With the Deep Space Network down, 720 00:48:59,647 --> 00:49:03,087 there will be no update from Perseverance today. 721 00:49:06,287 --> 00:49:09,206 But a couple of hours' drive from JPL 722 00:49:09,207 --> 00:49:12,206 is a unique lake called the Salton Sea. 723 00:49:14,246 --> 00:49:17,165 Set amongst the desert mountains, 724 00:49:17,166 --> 00:49:20,686 I could almost imagine the lake in Jezero Crater. 725 00:49:23,926 --> 00:49:27,365 I've come here to meet astrobiologist Tim Lyons. 726 00:49:32,365 --> 00:49:35,204 We're sat here in the middle of a desert. 727 00:49:35,205 --> 00:49:38,443 Very hot, very dry. No sign of rain. 728 00:49:38,444 --> 00:49:41,523 And yet there's this lake. So why is the lake here? 729 00:49:41,524 --> 00:49:44,923 Well, the lake is here because of an engineering disaster. 730 00:49:44,924 --> 00:49:47,523 In 1905, an irrigation canal was breached 731 00:49:47,524 --> 00:49:50,802 by floodwaters from the Colorado, 732 00:49:50,803 --> 00:49:53,562 and it drained almost unabatedly into this basin for two years. 733 00:49:53,563 --> 00:49:56,762 Subsequent to that, it has received agricultural runoff. 734 00:49:56,763 --> 00:50:00,442 So the water that we're looking at now is essentially waste water. 735 00:50:00,443 --> 00:50:02,601 It's a pretty nasty place, to be honest with you. 736 00:50:02,602 --> 00:50:04,441 And the fish are not doing very well, 737 00:50:04,442 --> 00:50:06,841 and the birds are correspondingly being impacted. 738 00:50:06,842 --> 00:50:10,721 But algae, bacteria, microbes are thriving. 739 00:50:10,722 --> 00:50:13,762 It's not a healthy environment, but it is teeming with life. 740 00:50:19,081 --> 00:50:22,360 It's this lake's unique microbial ecosystem 741 00:50:22,361 --> 00:50:26,000 that makes it an ideal place for studying the origin of life 742 00:50:26,001 --> 00:50:28,800 on Earth and on Mars. 743 00:50:34,120 --> 00:50:36,759 Look at these pools of colour. 744 00:50:36,760 --> 00:50:38,080 Pools of life! 745 00:50:39,160 --> 00:50:40,878 This is the stuff. 746 00:50:40,879 --> 00:50:44,958 That's the warm little pond teeming with life. 747 00:50:44,959 --> 00:50:48,238 It looks just like... I'm a physicist. 748 00:50:48,239 --> 00:50:51,478 It just looks like some floating scum. 749 00:50:51,479 --> 00:50:53,717 That's one description of it, yeah. 750 00:50:53,718 --> 00:50:56,557 So this is what you'd call a microbial mat? 751 00:50:56,558 --> 00:50:59,837 Well, I would say that this might be a microbial mat in the making. 752 00:50:59,838 --> 00:51:03,677 And so this is what early Earth life was like. 753 00:51:03,678 --> 00:51:07,156 Some of our very best, most convincing evidence for life 754 00:51:07,157 --> 00:51:10,916 going back in time on Earth are microbial mats, things 755 00:51:10,917 --> 00:51:15,796 like this pond that end up with these laminated concentrations, 756 00:51:15,797 --> 00:51:18,075 things we call stromatolites, 757 00:51:18,076 --> 00:51:21,195 found in places like Australia that go back, convincingly, 758 00:51:21,196 --> 00:51:23,235 to three and a half billion years ago, 759 00:51:23,236 --> 00:51:26,835 and some people would argue maybe even to 3.7 billion years ago. 760 00:51:26,836 --> 00:51:29,435 That's very close to the window of time 761 00:51:29,436 --> 00:51:31,634 that is being studied in Jezero. 762 00:51:31,635 --> 00:51:35,914 So if we were to imagine sort of, what, 3.8 billion years ago, 763 00:51:35,915 --> 00:51:38,554 standing on the shores of Jezero Crater, 764 00:51:38,555 --> 00:51:40,834 is there any chance it may have looked like this? 765 00:51:40,835 --> 00:51:42,474 Oh, absolutely. I think so. 766 00:51:42,475 --> 00:51:44,793 I think even a sceptic would have to admit that. 767 00:51:44,794 --> 00:51:47,233 And so here we're looking at the actual life 768 00:51:47,234 --> 00:51:48,753 that may have been present, 769 00:51:48,754 --> 00:51:51,833 analogous life present on Mars in Jezero, 770 00:51:51,834 --> 00:51:54,994 3.8, 3.7 billion years ago. 771 00:52:18,552 --> 00:52:20,950 Now I suppose you might reasonably ask, 772 00:52:20,951 --> 00:52:23,470 why are we so interested in the question, 773 00:52:23,471 --> 00:52:26,910 "Did life exist on a planet millions of miles away 774 00:52:26,911 --> 00:52:29,150 "three and a half billion years ago?" 775 00:52:29,151 --> 00:52:32,110 I don't think, actually, that's a reasonable question 776 00:52:32,111 --> 00:52:34,709 because the question, "Are we alone in the universe?" 777 00:52:34,710 --> 00:52:37,829 is one of the most profound philosophical questions. 778 00:52:37,830 --> 00:52:41,349 But if you want to be more pragmatic about it, then you might 779 00:52:41,350 --> 00:52:43,949 be interested in how life began here. 780 00:52:43,950 --> 00:52:47,548 How did we come to be here on Earth? 781 00:52:47,549 --> 00:52:51,348 And the evidence for the origin of life on Earth 782 00:52:51,349 --> 00:52:55,348 has actually largely been erased, because Earth is an active world. 783 00:52:55,349 --> 00:52:58,187 There's plate tectonics which take the evidence 784 00:52:58,188 --> 00:53:00,907 and literally take it down inside the planet. 785 00:53:00,908 --> 00:53:04,827 There's weathering with rain and wind and the oceans. 786 00:53:04,828 --> 00:53:08,507 And so there's very little evidence of what Earth was like 787 00:53:08,508 --> 00:53:10,467 three and a half billion years ago. 788 00:53:10,468 --> 00:53:14,426 But on Mars, it's different, because Mars is a planet 789 00:53:14,427 --> 00:53:18,506 that's been in deep freeze for three and a half billion years. 790 00:53:18,507 --> 00:53:21,667 There is no plate tectonics. There's very little weathering. 791 00:53:23,506 --> 00:53:28,506 So if life began on Mars, the evidence may still be there. 792 00:53:30,386 --> 00:53:34,145 So paradoxically, if you're interested in how we came 793 00:53:34,146 --> 00:53:38,065 to be here, the answer might lie up there. 794 00:53:43,185 --> 00:53:46,464 It's these profound questions about the origin of life 795 00:53:46,465 --> 00:53:49,704 that make Perseverance's mission so important. 796 00:53:51,704 --> 00:53:53,663 But searching for signs of ancient life 797 00:53:53,664 --> 00:53:56,384 on the surface of Mars isn't easy. 798 00:54:01,143 --> 00:54:06,062 Finding the remnants of it and then proving that it really is evidence 799 00:54:06,063 --> 00:54:09,143 of life is the rover's biggest challenge. 800 00:54:20,662 --> 00:54:24,101 Back at JPL, I'm meeting Luther Beegle... 801 00:54:24,102 --> 00:54:25,781 Hello, Luther. Hey. 802 00:54:25,782 --> 00:54:29,940 ..one of the chief scientists on the Perseverance team. 803 00:54:29,941 --> 00:54:32,380 It would be one of the greatest discoveries 804 00:54:32,381 --> 00:54:35,300 in the history of science, wouldn't it? 805 00:54:35,301 --> 00:54:38,780 In the history of civilisation. "We're not alone in the universe." 806 00:54:38,781 --> 00:54:42,939 So how much would it take to convince you? 807 00:54:42,940 --> 00:54:47,059 I know that you can never convince a roomful of scientists. 808 00:54:47,060 --> 00:54:48,219 Not all of them. 809 00:54:48,220 --> 00:54:50,779 No, we're not... We're not convincing a roomful of scientists 810 00:54:50,780 --> 00:54:52,858 on what they had for lunch. 811 00:54:52,859 --> 00:54:56,458 But I don't know what that level of convincing would be. 812 00:54:56,459 --> 00:54:58,978 It's something that's going to take a lot of evidence and a lot 813 00:54:58,979 --> 00:55:03,578 of chains, and a lot of different measurements to prove out. 814 00:55:03,579 --> 00:55:06,378 Luther is in charge of an instrument called Sherlock. 815 00:55:07,338 --> 00:55:10,057 Located at the end of the rover's arm, 816 00:55:10,058 --> 00:55:13,377 it's a laser scanner designed to detect 817 00:55:13,378 --> 00:55:16,338 the faintest chemical traces that life leaves behind. 818 00:55:18,697 --> 00:55:20,536 And we can demonstrate its abilities 819 00:55:20,537 --> 00:55:23,937 with some of the most ancient evidence of life on Earth. 820 00:55:26,497 --> 00:55:29,815 Life always leaves its imprint on its environments. 821 00:55:29,816 --> 00:55:32,175 I can show you in this particular sample here, 822 00:55:32,176 --> 00:55:35,455 this is a stromatolite from the Strelley pool formation 823 00:55:35,456 --> 00:55:38,495 in Australia. It's about 3.5 billion years old. 824 00:55:38,496 --> 00:55:41,375 I love the way you throw that away, by the way. 825 00:55:41,376 --> 00:55:43,414 Three and a half billion years old. 826 00:55:43,415 --> 00:55:46,054 Yeah. I mean, it just looks like a rock to me. 827 00:55:46,055 --> 00:55:47,174 So what... What... 828 00:55:47,175 --> 00:55:51,094 How would you convince me or anyone else that was biological? 829 00:55:51,095 --> 00:55:53,374 Well, if I wet this rock, you can kind of see 830 00:55:53,375 --> 00:55:55,934 the lines a little bit better. And so... 831 00:55:58,974 --> 00:56:02,053 So here you can really see, they really come out a little bit better. 832 00:56:02,054 --> 00:56:04,533 Oh, yeah. So you can see the white layer and the black layer, 833 00:56:04,534 --> 00:56:06,972 back and forth. Yeah, I can see those really clearly. Yeah. 834 00:56:06,973 --> 00:56:09,092 So why does that indicate biological activity? 835 00:56:09,093 --> 00:56:11,452 These particular stromatolites are curved, 836 00:56:11,453 --> 00:56:12,932 have different formations, 837 00:56:12,933 --> 00:56:15,932 that could only have been created through biological processes. 838 00:56:15,933 --> 00:56:19,372 So are you looking for patterns like this on Mars? 839 00:56:19,373 --> 00:56:21,611 We are looking for patterns like this on Mars 840 00:56:21,612 --> 00:56:25,131 as a first indication that this is either a sedimentary rock, 841 00:56:25,132 --> 00:56:26,571 or a stromatolite. 842 00:56:26,572 --> 00:56:29,732 And then we have to do the next layer of analysis on those rocks. 843 00:56:31,892 --> 00:56:34,610 And this is where Sherlock comes in. 844 00:56:34,611 --> 00:56:38,410 After scraping away the surface of the rock, it zooms in 845 00:56:38,411 --> 00:56:40,491 to examine it in microscopic detail. 846 00:56:42,371 --> 00:56:45,489 Using the reflected light from lasers to detect 847 00:56:45,490 --> 00:56:48,569 the tiny variations in chemical composition 848 00:56:48,570 --> 00:56:51,410 that are left behind by living organisms. 849 00:56:53,090 --> 00:56:57,289 So here you can see what a Sherlock scan, where we went in and looked 850 00:56:57,290 --> 00:57:00,168 at where the organic molecules on this particular rock was. 851 00:57:00,169 --> 00:57:03,608 The purple material here is the ancient organic material. 852 00:57:03,609 --> 00:57:06,528 You can see that there are lines associated with this, 853 00:57:06,529 --> 00:57:09,488 where the basic biology then grew and died, 854 00:57:09,489 --> 00:57:12,407 and grew and died, and moved up the rock like this. 855 00:57:12,408 --> 00:57:17,327 So these are literally the remains of organisms that lived potentially 856 00:57:17,328 --> 00:57:20,288 billions of years ago. Potentially billions of years ago. 857 00:57:22,647 --> 00:57:26,766 The great hope is that Perseverance will find similar signs of life 858 00:57:26,767 --> 00:57:28,167 when it reaches the delta. 859 00:57:32,447 --> 00:57:33,566 You must be waiting... 860 00:57:33,567 --> 00:57:36,245 I know the Perseverance landed, and there's a lot 861 00:57:36,246 --> 00:57:38,085 of geology being done. You must be saying, 862 00:57:38,086 --> 00:57:40,245 "Can you just get round to the delta, please?" 863 00:57:40,246 --> 00:57:42,085 We do. "Can we go? Can we go? Can we go? 864 00:57:42,086 --> 00:57:44,285 "I want to go to the delta. I want to go to the delta." 865 00:57:44,286 --> 00:57:45,685 But we understand the geology. 866 00:57:45,686 --> 00:57:48,164 You know, we're a big giant 400-person team, so you kind 867 00:57:48,165 --> 00:57:49,364 of want to work together. 868 00:57:49,365 --> 00:57:51,364 But at the same time, "Can we can get to the delta? 869 00:57:51,365 --> 00:57:52,604 "Can we get to the delta? 870 00:57:52,605 --> 00:57:54,844 "Can we stay at the delta for a while?" Yeah. 871 00:57:54,845 --> 00:57:59,044 So images like this, you know, potentially, in a golden scenario, 872 00:57:59,045 --> 00:58:02,883 we could expect results like this in a few months? 873 00:58:02,884 --> 00:58:05,763 Yeah, in months rather than years, 874 00:58:05,764 --> 00:58:08,244 which is nice to see the finish line. 875 00:58:12,124 --> 00:58:16,482 It is a tantalising thought that we may soon get our first hints, 876 00:58:16,483 --> 00:58:18,642 our first pieces of evidence 877 00:58:18,643 --> 00:58:22,003 that life may once have filled this crater. 878 00:58:38,042 --> 00:58:40,600 Day five. 879 00:58:40,601 --> 00:58:44,720 After 24 hours of radio silence, contact is re-established 880 00:58:44,721 --> 00:58:46,601 with Perseverance on Mars... 881 00:58:48,361 --> 00:58:51,360 ..and we get our first update on the two-day drive. 882 00:58:55,360 --> 00:58:58,759 Photos and telemetry show the first part of the drive 883 00:58:58,760 --> 00:59:00,719 has gone according to plan. 884 00:59:00,720 --> 00:59:06,078 The rover covering another 259 metres and 37 centimetres 885 00:59:06,079 --> 00:59:09,039 around the edge of the Seitah sand dunes. 886 00:59:10,159 --> 00:59:14,159 But it seems that this is as far as the rover will be going for now. 887 00:59:22,878 --> 00:59:25,277 News filters through that the instructions 888 00:59:25,278 --> 00:59:27,997 for the second day's drive had a bug in them 889 00:59:27,998 --> 00:59:30,317 and were never received by the rover. 890 00:59:34,477 --> 00:59:36,636 To find out what went wrong, 891 00:59:36,637 --> 00:59:40,957 I'm off to find deputy mission scientist Katie Stack Morgan. 892 00:59:42,356 --> 00:59:45,395 So do you know what happened overnight when the data came down? 893 00:59:45,396 --> 00:59:48,515 Yes. So we had planned two days' worth of driving. 894 00:59:48,516 --> 00:59:52,315 And that's a brand-new capability for Mars rovers, being able to plan 895 00:59:52,316 --> 00:59:54,674 drives in a row like that. 896 00:59:54,675 --> 00:59:58,434 But we encountered an issue that prevented us from uplinking 897 00:59:58,435 --> 01:00:01,634 both of those drives, and sending both of those drives to the rover. 898 01:00:01,635 --> 01:00:04,834 It's interesting to me that the problem was not with... on Mars. 899 01:00:04,835 --> 01:00:06,393 No issue on Mars at all. 900 01:00:06,394 --> 01:00:09,673 But it's the computer software, basically. That's right. 901 01:00:09,674 --> 01:00:11,593 You know, and these things happen all the time. 902 01:00:11,594 --> 01:00:14,193 And we deal with them. In a way this is helpful to us, 903 01:00:14,194 --> 01:00:17,153 because by giving the rover a whole day to recharge, 904 01:00:17,154 --> 01:00:19,752 we then fill up our batteries all the way to the top, 905 01:00:19,753 --> 01:00:22,352 and we can get ready to do long drives in the weekend plan. 906 01:00:22,353 --> 01:00:24,752 So - silver lining to that, to not being able 907 01:00:24,753 --> 01:00:26,073 to get that other drive up. 908 01:00:29,273 --> 01:00:32,671 Having fallen another day behind schedule, the rover now 909 01:00:32,672 --> 01:00:35,791 has to travel 750 metres in just two days 910 01:00:35,792 --> 01:00:37,831 to reach La Orotava crater 911 01:00:37,832 --> 01:00:39,512 by the end of the week. 912 01:00:42,432 --> 01:00:46,830 But Perseverance isn't the only vehicle that the team has on Mars. 913 01:00:46,831 --> 01:00:51,111 And this week, I've also come to learn about its companion. 914 01:00:54,071 --> 01:00:58,110 Ingenuity, the first-ever extraterrestrial helicopter. 915 01:00:59,910 --> 01:01:03,949 I'm fascinated by this machine because it was designed to do 916 01:01:03,950 --> 01:01:10,028 the seemingly impossible - to fly in Mars's almost vanishingly thin 917 01:01:10,029 --> 01:01:13,549 atmosphere, just 1% as thick as the Earth's. 918 01:01:22,828 --> 01:01:26,107 To find out how Ingenuity achieves such a feat, 919 01:01:26,108 --> 01:01:30,707 I'm meeting Havard Grip, the helicopter's chief pilot, who's 920 01:01:30,708 --> 01:01:34,827 taking me to see the engineering model of the helicopter. 921 01:01:37,707 --> 01:01:40,706 So this is our helicopter lab. 922 01:01:40,707 --> 01:01:45,666 It's probably the most important space that we have as a project. 923 01:01:45,667 --> 01:01:49,585 So here you want to stay away from the model in the middle, 924 01:01:49,586 --> 01:01:51,105 and the hardware along the edges. 925 01:01:51,106 --> 01:01:53,025 I'm really... I'm really excited to see this. 926 01:01:53,026 --> 01:01:56,145 It's smaller than I imagined. 927 01:01:56,146 --> 01:02:01,184 Although the blades look, to me, much bigger than I'd imagined. 928 01:02:01,185 --> 01:02:02,864 Much thicker. That's right. 929 01:02:02,865 --> 01:02:05,984 So the main thing you notice is just the size of the rotor. 930 01:02:05,985 --> 01:02:07,824 1.2 metres, tip to tip. 931 01:02:07,825 --> 01:02:09,504 It's just huge, you know, 932 01:02:09,505 --> 01:02:13,383 And if that was on Earth with this same kind of rotor, 933 01:02:13,384 --> 01:02:15,823 it could lift a huge amount of mass. 934 01:02:15,824 --> 01:02:20,623 But on Mars, you need that just to lift this tiny little helicopter 935 01:02:20,624 --> 01:02:24,623 off the ground. How much does it weigh? 1.8kg. 936 01:02:24,624 --> 01:02:26,663 Is that all? That's it, yeah. 937 01:02:30,743 --> 01:02:35,422 Even at 1.8 kilos, it wasn't clear that Ingenuity would be able to fly 938 01:02:35,423 --> 01:02:36,823 in Mars's atmosphere. 939 01:02:39,662 --> 01:02:44,501 On April 19, 2021, Perseverance pointed its cameras 940 01:02:44,502 --> 01:02:48,382 at the helicopter, as it prepared for its first flight. 941 01:02:51,901 --> 01:02:55,860 And millions of miles away at JPL, its engineering team 942 01:02:55,861 --> 01:02:57,900 waited for news... 943 01:02:57,901 --> 01:02:59,981 ..of success or failure. 944 01:03:50,057 --> 01:03:51,936 I see you brought your logbook, which has got 945 01:03:51,937 --> 01:03:54,056 to be the coolest logbook. 946 01:03:55,256 --> 01:03:58,535 It's pretty neat. It's called the pilot's logbook 947 01:03:58,536 --> 01:04:00,095 for planets and moons. 948 01:04:00,096 --> 01:04:03,895 Yeah. So it's you and the Apollo astronauts. 949 01:04:03,896 --> 01:04:06,334 That's basically... That's pretty much it. 950 01:04:06,335 --> 01:04:08,694 I love this. So the remarks are fantastic. 951 01:04:08,695 --> 01:04:12,014 "First powered flight by an aircraft on another world." 952 01:04:12,015 --> 01:04:14,374 That's right. That's fantastic. 953 01:04:14,375 --> 01:04:16,695 It was fun to write that, yeah. 954 01:04:17,815 --> 01:04:21,774 "Climb to three metres, turns 96 degrees to the right." 955 01:04:23,014 --> 01:04:25,573 That's just wonderful. That will go down in history, won't it? 956 01:04:25,574 --> 01:04:27,933 That's going to be one of those things that has a picture. 957 01:04:27,934 --> 01:04:32,132 It is aviation history, you know, so it's pretty special 958 01:04:32,133 --> 01:04:33,453 to be part of it. 959 01:04:38,733 --> 01:04:42,372 Ingenuity's place in history is assured. 960 01:04:42,373 --> 01:04:46,171 Initially, it was only designed to survive for three months and make 961 01:04:46,172 --> 01:04:47,492 just five flights. 962 01:04:48,812 --> 01:04:54,491 But over a year later, it was still going strong, making 20 flights, 963 01:04:54,492 --> 01:04:58,410 clocking up over 36 minutes' total flight time, 964 01:04:58,411 --> 01:05:00,331 and covering over 4km. 965 01:05:01,611 --> 01:05:06,091 But its real contribution to the mission may still be to come. 966 01:05:07,971 --> 01:05:12,329 If the helicopter can make it to the delta, this ability to fly 967 01:05:12,330 --> 01:05:14,369 over the steep slopes and cliffs 968 01:05:14,370 --> 01:05:17,730 that the rover can't access will prove invaluable. 969 01:05:20,090 --> 01:05:24,289 But even reaching the delta will be an enormous challenge. 970 01:05:25,929 --> 01:05:30,648 And just before our seven-day rover mission began, Ingenuity attempted 971 01:05:30,649 --> 01:05:32,969 the next flight on that journey. 972 01:05:35,008 --> 01:05:40,367 It's very exciting, actually, because yesterday, Earth time, 973 01:05:40,368 --> 01:05:43,927 the helicopter flew and we don't know what happened to it. 974 01:05:43,928 --> 01:05:46,886 Actually, the data came down last night, and this is the meeting 975 01:05:46,887 --> 01:05:48,206 where the engineering teams 976 01:05:48,207 --> 01:05:50,846 look at the data from the helicopter, and see what it did. 977 01:05:50,847 --> 01:05:53,886 And they've allowed us... It wasn't clear they were going to do this, 978 01:05:53,887 --> 01:05:57,046 but they've allowed us to go into the meeting and watch 979 01:05:57,047 --> 01:06:01,606 as they review the engineering data from the flight. 980 01:06:08,846 --> 01:06:12,125 This is a make or break flight for Ingenuity. 981 01:06:14,765 --> 01:06:18,084 Rather than taking the long way round to the delta, 982 01:06:18,085 --> 01:06:20,364 it's going to attempt to take a short cut 983 01:06:20,365 --> 01:06:22,885 across the treacherous Seitah sand dunes. 984 01:06:24,564 --> 01:06:27,163 But the helicopter relies on Perseverance 985 01:06:27,164 --> 01:06:29,563 for its communication with Earth. 986 01:06:29,564 --> 01:06:32,443 And this journey will take the vehicles further apart 987 01:06:32,444 --> 01:06:33,803 than ever before. 988 01:06:33,804 --> 01:06:38,002 So a safe landing in a spot where it can maintain radio contact 989 01:06:38,003 --> 01:06:40,243 with the rover will be crucial. 990 01:06:57,002 --> 01:06:59,641 As the team go through the flight data, 991 01:06:59,642 --> 01:07:02,281 there's a nervous wait. 992 01:07:24,120 --> 01:07:28,159 These are the pictures Ingenuity took during the flight. 993 01:07:29,119 --> 01:07:30,638 As it looks down at its shadow, 994 01:07:30,639 --> 01:07:34,518 we can track its path as it rises ten metres into the air, 995 01:07:34,519 --> 01:07:38,399 then traverses the 370 metres to its new landing spot... 996 01:07:41,078 --> 01:07:44,037 ..from where it should be able to stay in communication 997 01:07:44,038 --> 01:07:46,998 with Perseverance as it drives to the delta. 998 01:07:59,917 --> 01:08:02,356 That's really interesting, 999 01:08:02,357 --> 01:08:06,155 and what really strikes me is that 1000 01:08:06,156 --> 01:08:10,595 this helicopter was not really designed to last this long. 1001 01:08:10,596 --> 01:08:13,275 They thought it would maybe fly four or five times. 1002 01:08:13,276 --> 01:08:16,035 It's now had its 21st flight, and it's all working 1003 01:08:16,036 --> 01:08:17,914 and it's recharging properly. 1004 01:08:17,915 --> 01:08:21,155 So it's a, you know, it's a tremendous engineering achievement. 1005 01:08:22,235 --> 01:08:25,394 Remember you're flying a little helicopter autonomously 1006 01:08:25,395 --> 01:08:27,714 on the surface of another planet. 1007 01:08:27,715 --> 01:08:30,434 Nobody's flying it, it's flying itself. 1008 01:08:37,914 --> 01:08:40,553 If you told the 12-year-old me 1009 01:08:40,554 --> 01:08:42,393 who first wrote to JPL 1010 01:08:42,394 --> 01:08:44,192 that one day I'd be here 1011 01:08:44,193 --> 01:08:49,033 seeing a helicopter fly on Mars, I wouldn't have believed it. 1012 01:08:50,553 --> 01:08:55,032 But Ingenuity is just one of many reminders of how far our 1013 01:08:55,033 --> 01:08:56,792 technology has advanced. 1014 01:09:00,792 --> 01:09:05,191 This is a piece of history because this is the first picture 1015 01:09:05,192 --> 01:09:08,470 ever returned of the surface of Mars by spacecraft. 1016 01:09:08,471 --> 01:09:10,950 It's Mariner 4, 1965. 1017 01:09:10,951 --> 01:09:14,670 And you might see actually, it's kind of a fuzzy picture. 1018 01:09:14,671 --> 01:09:16,750 It's actually hand-drawn. 1019 01:09:16,751 --> 01:09:21,069 These are strips of tape that came out of the printer with numbers 1020 01:09:21,070 --> 01:09:24,389 printed on, which are the data from the cameras on Mariner 4, 1021 01:09:24,390 --> 01:09:26,429 and they correspond to colours. 1022 01:09:26,430 --> 01:09:28,109 And the data link was so slow 1023 01:09:28,110 --> 01:09:30,549 that the engineers and, in particular, 1024 01:09:30,550 --> 01:09:32,789 one engineer called Richard Grumm, 1025 01:09:32,790 --> 01:09:34,428 got so bored with waiting 1026 01:09:34,429 --> 01:09:37,068 that he went to an art shop in Pasadena, 1027 01:09:37,069 --> 01:09:38,708 bought these crayons, 1028 01:09:38,709 --> 01:09:42,788 these are the real ones, in this box, and then sat there colouring 1029 01:09:42,789 --> 01:09:46,028 it in so he could see the image from Mariner. 1030 01:09:51,828 --> 01:09:54,787 Compare that to the high resolution images that we're getting 1031 01:09:54,788 --> 01:09:56,468 back from Perseverance. 1032 01:09:57,668 --> 01:09:58,706 Yeah. 1033 01:09:58,707 --> 01:10:00,947 There's technology marching on. 1034 01:10:31,065 --> 01:10:32,185 Day six begins. 1035 01:10:34,785 --> 01:10:39,503 And once again, we're waiting to hear from Perseverance. 1036 01:10:39,504 --> 01:10:43,303 Overnight, it should have received the instructions for the delayed 1037 01:10:43,304 --> 01:10:46,064 second half of its two-day drive. 1038 01:10:50,303 --> 01:10:53,742 And the incoming data reveals an astonishing day 1039 01:10:53,743 --> 01:10:55,183 of auto nav driving. 1040 01:10:57,223 --> 01:11:02,101 Perseverance has recorded the second furthest distance any Martian rover 1041 01:11:02,102 --> 01:11:04,781 has ever travelled in a single day. 1042 01:11:04,782 --> 01:11:08,782 297 metres and 60 centimetres. 1043 01:11:11,182 --> 01:11:15,221 So far this week, the rover has covered over 760 metres. 1044 01:11:16,261 --> 01:11:21,180 But with only one day to go in our time at JPL, La Orotava crater 1045 01:11:21,181 --> 01:11:23,901 is still nearly half a kilometre away. 1046 01:11:27,700 --> 01:11:32,019 It will take a Herculean effort to reach there tomorrow. 1047 01:11:32,020 --> 01:11:34,779 And while Vandi and the rover driving team build the plan 1048 01:11:34,780 --> 01:11:35,900 for that drive... 1049 01:11:40,019 --> 01:11:43,379 ..I have another appointment with Optimism in the Mars yard. 1050 01:11:50,059 --> 01:11:52,777 Today, the engineering team are running tests on what may 1051 01:11:52,778 --> 01:11:56,498 be the most important and ambitious system on the rover. 1052 01:11:58,858 --> 01:12:00,938 Starting move to contact. 1053 01:12:02,698 --> 01:12:06,176 All right, Greta, you can kick off coring. 1054 01:12:06,177 --> 01:12:08,136 All right. Yep. 1055 01:12:08,137 --> 01:12:10,057 Sending coring in three, two, one. 1056 01:12:20,576 --> 01:12:23,255 Perseverance, as you can see and hear, 1057 01:12:23,256 --> 01:12:25,215 is equipped with a drill. 1058 01:12:25,216 --> 01:12:26,655 And drills are always noisy. 1059 01:12:26,656 --> 01:12:29,494 Be less noisy on Mars, by the way, because of the much 1060 01:12:29,495 --> 01:12:31,095 less dense atmosphere. 1061 01:12:34,295 --> 01:12:36,494 We're at a depth of 3.9mm 1062 01:12:36,495 --> 01:12:39,015 out of our target five millimetres. Thanks, Greta. 1063 01:12:43,094 --> 01:12:47,693 On Mars, Perseverance uses exactly the same system to collect cylinders 1064 01:12:47,694 --> 01:12:52,294 of rock that may contain key evidence for the existence of life. 1065 01:12:54,014 --> 01:12:58,292 So far, it's collected and stored eight samples, with room for 30 1066 01:12:58,293 --> 01:12:59,973 more when it reaches the delta. 1067 01:13:03,013 --> 01:13:07,211 And the reason that this process is so important is that, one day, 1068 01:13:07,212 --> 01:13:10,812 these samples will hopefully be brought back to Earth. 1069 01:13:15,212 --> 01:13:18,611 Mini Wadhwa is the science lead for the mission that will return 1070 01:13:18,612 --> 01:13:21,011 the Martian rocks to this planet. 1071 01:13:22,331 --> 01:13:25,570 Why is it so important to bring the samples back to Earth? 1072 01:13:25,571 --> 01:13:28,130 Because I suppose, naively, "We've got 1073 01:13:28,131 --> 01:13:29,970 "this tremendously sophisticated robot. 1074 01:13:29,971 --> 01:13:31,250 "It's got the samples. 1075 01:13:31,251 --> 01:13:34,649 "Why doesn't it just look for signs of life itself?" 1076 01:13:34,650 --> 01:13:36,729 This is an incredible machine. 1077 01:13:36,730 --> 01:13:40,969 But the kinds of analyses that we want to be able to do 1078 01:13:40,970 --> 01:13:44,529 with the samples is going to require really the best and most 1079 01:13:44,530 --> 01:13:45,968 sophisticated instrumentation 1080 01:13:45,969 --> 01:13:47,608 that you have available on the Earth. 1081 01:13:47,609 --> 01:13:51,488 And it's just not possible on a small rover like that. 1082 01:13:51,489 --> 01:13:56,168 The other factor is that we want to be able to reproduce results. 1083 01:13:56,169 --> 01:13:58,407 I mean, can you imagine what it would be like if somebody 1084 01:13:58,408 --> 01:14:02,807 actually found evidence of past life in these samples? 1085 01:14:02,808 --> 01:14:04,807 We'd want to verify those results, 1086 01:14:04,808 --> 01:14:06,407 and we'd want to verify them 1087 01:14:06,408 --> 01:14:07,967 in independent laboratories. 1088 01:14:07,968 --> 01:14:11,926 That's not something you can do with a remote laboratory on Mars. 1089 01:14:11,927 --> 01:14:15,526 You've got to bring them back here, so that the best scientists 1090 01:14:15,527 --> 01:14:18,726 and the best labs can really have at it. 1091 01:14:18,727 --> 01:14:21,926 Yeah, I suppose it is an example of extraordinary claims 1092 01:14:21,927 --> 01:14:25,166 require extraordinary evidence, isn't? Exactly. 1093 01:14:27,846 --> 01:14:32,326 Bringing the samples back to Earth will not be a trivial task. 1094 01:14:35,365 --> 01:14:38,364 To do it, engineers have designed a mission 1095 01:14:38,365 --> 01:14:40,684 unlike anything I've ever seen. 1096 01:14:40,685 --> 01:14:42,925 It's called Mars Sample Return. 1097 01:14:46,525 --> 01:14:49,443 The Mars Sample Return mission sounds really simple 1098 01:14:49,444 --> 01:14:50,603 as a concept, right? 1099 01:14:50,604 --> 01:14:54,083 All you've got to do is get some samples from the surface of Mars 1100 01:14:54,084 --> 01:14:55,523 and bring them back to Earth. 1101 01:14:55,524 --> 01:14:59,763 But actually, when you hear the engineering solution, 1102 01:14:59,764 --> 01:15:02,483 how to do that, it sounds fantastical. 1103 01:15:04,243 --> 01:15:06,482 So there are two missions that fly to Mars. 1104 01:15:06,483 --> 01:15:09,922 One is the so-called fetch rover, which is a little rover, 1105 01:15:09,923 --> 01:15:12,202 which is going to land on the surface of Mars, 1106 01:15:12,203 --> 01:15:14,921 and it's going to drive around and it's going to pick 1107 01:15:14,922 --> 01:15:18,241 up the samples, bring them back to an ascent vehicle, 1108 01:15:18,242 --> 01:15:21,002 which is the thing that's going to launch those samples into orbit. 1109 01:15:23,842 --> 01:15:26,560 And then the sample thing itself detaches away. 1110 01:15:26,561 --> 01:15:29,600 And it's only about a basketball size, maybe a bit bigger. 1111 01:15:29,601 --> 01:15:33,200 And then another mission comes from Earth, and it has to locate 1112 01:15:33,201 --> 01:15:37,000 this thing that's in orbit somewhere around Mars, and then it has to kind 1113 01:15:37,001 --> 01:15:39,319 of go and grab it in space. 1114 01:15:39,320 --> 01:15:42,239 And then when it gets to Earth, it'll detach, 1115 01:15:42,240 --> 01:15:45,479 with this precious cargo in it, will enter the Earth's atmosphere. 1116 01:15:45,480 --> 01:15:47,360 No rockets, no parachutes. 1117 01:15:48,440 --> 01:15:52,438 It will just impact into the sand somewhere in Utah. 1118 01:15:52,439 --> 01:15:56,038 And then they'll go and find it and bring it back into laboratories. 1119 01:15:56,039 --> 01:16:00,238 And that, believe it or not, is the simplest and safest 1120 01:16:00,239 --> 01:16:04,877 engineering solution to bringing something about that big, filled 1121 01:16:04,878 --> 01:16:07,558 with samples from Mars, back to Earth. 1122 01:16:16,717 --> 01:16:19,236 Now, all that might sound like science fiction, but actually 1123 01:16:19,237 --> 01:16:23,436 it's going to have to become science fact pretty soon, because the first 1124 01:16:23,437 --> 01:16:27,276 bits of the sample return mission is supposed to launch in 2026, 1125 01:16:27,277 --> 01:16:30,235 which is only, what, about four years away. 1126 01:16:30,236 --> 01:16:31,795 They're preparing for it now. 1127 01:16:31,796 --> 01:16:35,235 In fact, up there - see that tower? 1128 01:16:35,236 --> 01:16:36,755 That's the test-bed 1129 01:16:36,756 --> 01:16:41,554 for the dropping the capsule that returns those samples to Earth, 1130 01:16:41,555 --> 01:16:44,394 to see, when it hits the ground, if it survives. 1131 01:16:44,395 --> 01:16:47,194 So it is not an exaggeration to say, 1132 01:16:47,195 --> 01:16:49,914 as I'm going to say it, that I think 1133 01:16:49,915 --> 01:16:53,714 the best engineers in the world are working on this project. 1134 01:16:57,434 --> 01:17:00,554 Here at JPL, development is well under way. 1135 01:17:01,874 --> 01:17:04,593 They're already testing the systems that will launch the rocket 1136 01:17:04,594 --> 01:17:06,393 from the surface of Mars. 1137 01:17:09,713 --> 01:17:13,513 And the capsule that will crash into the Utah desert. 1138 01:17:14,713 --> 01:17:18,032 If all goes to plan, the samples collected on Mars could be returned 1139 01:17:18,033 --> 01:17:21,552 to Earth by as early as 2031. 1140 01:17:25,592 --> 01:17:27,952 It's undoubtedly a risky mission. 1141 01:17:30,632 --> 01:17:34,270 But there may also be risks when the Martian rocks are safely 1142 01:17:34,271 --> 01:17:35,311 back on Earth. 1143 01:17:37,071 --> 01:17:41,391 And that's what I want to investigate on my last day at JPL. 1144 01:17:59,749 --> 01:18:03,268 Bringing Martian samples back to Earth is going to be vital 1145 01:18:03,269 --> 01:18:07,029 if we're ever going to prove that there was life on Mars. 1146 01:18:09,668 --> 01:18:14,187 But there is an outside possibility that those samples could also cause 1147 01:18:14,188 --> 01:18:16,228 a problem for life on Earth. 1148 01:18:17,628 --> 01:18:19,347 Welcome. 1149 01:18:19,348 --> 01:18:23,626 Oh, I mean, I've got to say, there are badges of every mission 1150 01:18:23,627 --> 01:18:25,226 that I grew up with here. 1151 01:18:25,227 --> 01:18:26,746 So what's this room? 1152 01:18:26,747 --> 01:18:28,986 This is the spacecraft assembly facility. 1153 01:18:28,987 --> 01:18:31,106 It's where all of the magic happens. 1154 01:18:31,107 --> 01:18:35,746 Every single spacecraft built at JPL was assembled in this room. 1155 01:18:36,706 --> 01:18:40,465 Moogega Cooper is one of the people whose job it is to make sure 1156 01:18:40,466 --> 01:18:42,426 that our planet stays safe. 1157 01:18:43,466 --> 01:18:45,705 So you have one of the best job titles, I think, 1158 01:18:45,706 --> 01:18:49,504 which is Planetary Protection Lead for Mars 2020. 1159 01:18:49,505 --> 01:18:51,864 So what is planetary protection? 1160 01:18:51,865 --> 01:18:53,984 Planetary protection is two-fold. 1161 01:18:53,985 --> 01:18:56,824 We have to make sure that, as we send spacecraft 1162 01:18:56,825 --> 01:18:58,864 out into the solar system, 1163 01:18:58,865 --> 01:19:03,023 whether to planets, moons or asteroids, we have to make sure 1164 01:19:03,024 --> 01:19:06,583 that we don't spread our contaminants to those places 1165 01:19:06,584 --> 01:19:08,903 of interest, especially if it could harbour life. 1166 01:19:08,904 --> 01:19:12,382 And the flip side, if we were to bring samples back 1167 01:19:12,383 --> 01:19:15,062 to our own planet, we have to make sure our planet is protected 1168 01:19:15,063 --> 01:19:18,102 from anything that might be harmful out there. 1169 01:19:18,103 --> 01:19:21,742 So are we worried about microbes from Mars? Yeah. 1170 01:19:21,743 --> 01:19:25,061 In fact, the assumption is to handle it as if it's hazardous 1171 01:19:25,062 --> 01:19:26,581 until proven otherwise. 1172 01:19:26,582 --> 01:19:28,981 The level of precaution that is going to be taken 1173 01:19:28,982 --> 01:19:32,421 with these samples is that of a hazardous material. 1174 01:19:32,422 --> 01:19:34,861 So when we bring the samples back, 1175 01:19:34,862 --> 01:19:37,540 so we've heard this audacious idea - 1176 01:19:37,541 --> 01:19:40,220 I mean, Mars sample return is terrifying, from an engineering 1177 01:19:40,221 --> 01:19:43,540 perspective - but essentially you're going to crash it into Utah. 1178 01:19:43,541 --> 01:19:44,900 Right. A controlled crash. 1179 01:19:44,901 --> 01:19:46,540 I know that's not the language. 1180 01:19:46,541 --> 01:19:49,580 There's going to be a controlled descent... There we go. 1181 01:19:49,581 --> 01:19:52,259 ..without parachutes, into Utah. 1182 01:19:52,260 --> 01:19:54,699 So what is the procedure from then on? 1183 01:19:54,700 --> 01:19:56,779 So you have this capsule, sealed capsule... 1184 01:19:56,780 --> 01:19:59,019 Yeah... in the desert. What happens to it? 1185 01:19:59,020 --> 01:20:03,258 The goal in general is to take that capsule, bring it to a facility 1186 01:20:03,259 --> 01:20:07,058 that is unlike any facility that exists today on our planet, 1187 01:20:07,059 --> 01:20:10,698 to safely contain anything that might be in that sample 1188 01:20:10,699 --> 01:20:12,978 while we open it up, extract the samples 1189 01:20:12,979 --> 01:20:15,257 and interrogate it scientifically. 1190 01:20:15,258 --> 01:20:17,257 So it will be a... It will be... 1191 01:20:17,258 --> 01:20:20,057 We will build a bio lab like no other. 1192 01:20:20,058 --> 01:20:22,018 Exactly. Essentially. Yeah. 1193 01:20:25,178 --> 01:20:28,936 For the Martian samples, Nasa is planning on creating the most 1194 01:20:28,937 --> 01:20:31,257 biosecure laboratory ever built. 1195 01:20:32,937 --> 01:20:36,496 More secure than the labs like these that handle lethal 1196 01:20:36,497 --> 01:20:38,897 diseases like Ebola and smallpox. 1197 01:20:41,536 --> 01:20:44,615 But while taking all possible precautions is definitely the right 1198 01:20:44,616 --> 01:20:45,856 thing to do... 1199 01:20:47,816 --> 01:20:50,095 ..it's probably too late to protect us 1200 01:20:50,096 --> 01:20:51,736 from Martian contamination. 1201 01:20:53,135 --> 01:20:55,854 When we speak about planetary protection, that sort of gives 1202 01:20:55,855 --> 01:20:59,054 the sense that Mars and Earth are completely isolated 1203 01:20:59,055 --> 01:21:00,294 from each other. 1204 01:21:00,295 --> 01:21:04,094 But that's certainly not the case because this 1205 01:21:04,095 --> 01:21:05,494 is a piece of Mars. 1206 01:21:06,494 --> 01:21:11,973 It's from a Martian meteorite that fell in Nigeria in 1962. 1207 01:21:11,974 --> 01:21:16,133 Now, that raises an interesting possibility, because if rocks 1208 01:21:16,134 --> 01:21:18,372 can be transferred from Mars to Earth, 1209 01:21:18,373 --> 01:21:21,172 and actually about 500kg of Mars 1210 01:21:21,173 --> 01:21:24,332 floats down onto the Earth every year, 1211 01:21:24,333 --> 01:21:27,093 then maybe so can life. 1212 01:21:29,813 --> 01:21:33,571 The idea that life could migrate between the planets 1213 01:21:33,572 --> 01:21:35,931 may sound incredible. 1214 01:21:35,932 --> 01:21:39,531 But there are scientists who believe it's possible that life 1215 01:21:39,532 --> 01:21:42,571 could have arisen on Earth and been carried to Mars 1216 01:21:42,572 --> 01:21:43,691 on a meteorite. 1217 01:21:47,531 --> 01:21:52,730 And it's also possible that life began on Mars and was transported 1218 01:21:52,731 --> 01:21:53,771 to the Earth. 1219 01:21:57,050 --> 01:21:59,490 Now, we don't know if that happened. 1220 01:22:01,090 --> 01:22:04,009 But a key step towards finding out 1221 01:22:04,010 --> 01:22:06,690 would be to find traces of life on Mars. 1222 01:22:08,769 --> 01:22:13,609 And it certainly adds an extra dimension to Perseverance's mission. 1223 01:22:21,408 --> 01:22:25,207 As our week at JPL comes to a close, we get a final 1224 01:22:25,208 --> 01:22:27,008 update from Perseverance. 1225 01:22:30,368 --> 01:22:33,248 It's still trundling towards La Orotava. 1226 01:22:34,607 --> 01:22:37,886 The telemetry showing it's completed another 1227 01:22:37,887 --> 01:22:41,447 240 metres and 70 centimetres of auto nav driving. 1228 01:22:43,687 --> 01:22:47,445 It's 200 metres short of the crater. 1229 01:22:47,446 --> 01:22:51,045 But it's still been a remarkable week. 1230 01:22:51,046 --> 01:22:53,685 So are you happy with the way the rover's performed? 1231 01:22:53,686 --> 01:22:57,125 Because I know that this was a big week for you, making this transition 1232 01:22:57,126 --> 01:23:00,724 from the first scientific campaign to the long drive 1233 01:23:00,725 --> 01:23:01,844 around to the delta. 1234 01:23:01,845 --> 01:23:03,684 Yes, this was a big week for the mission 1235 01:23:03,685 --> 01:23:04,804 and a major turning point. 1236 01:23:04,805 --> 01:23:07,324 We've been moving our way slowly through the crater floor. 1237 01:23:07,325 --> 01:23:10,244 But now with this goal of getting to the delta as quickly as possible, 1238 01:23:10,245 --> 01:23:14,163 we're really flexing the rover's legs, so to speak, and trying 1239 01:23:14,164 --> 01:23:15,363 out a new mode of operation. 1240 01:23:15,364 --> 01:23:18,203 And that led to some unexpected surprises for us. 1241 01:23:18,204 --> 01:23:20,243 Yeah, that's what I find really interesting. 1242 01:23:20,244 --> 01:23:22,803 What I've learned is that, even though you know this rover 1243 01:23:22,804 --> 01:23:27,242 well, now, the moment you ask it to do something slightly 1244 01:23:27,243 --> 01:23:30,242 different, then you learn a lot more about the rover. 1245 01:23:30,243 --> 01:23:33,082 But the way it behaves on Mars and that terrain 1246 01:23:33,083 --> 01:23:34,763 can always surprise us. 1247 01:23:38,682 --> 01:23:43,161 This is the rover's eye view of the journey it's made this week. 1248 01:23:43,162 --> 01:23:47,041 Even with the hiccups, the drill stuck in a rock, and the day lost 1249 01:23:47,042 --> 01:23:48,601 to a software error, 1250 01:23:48,602 --> 01:23:52,600 Perseverance has still covered over a kilometre. 1251 01:23:52,601 --> 01:23:58,000 At 1003 metres, it's the furthest any planetary rover has ever 1252 01:23:58,001 --> 01:24:00,881 travelled in such a short space of time. 1253 01:24:10,040 --> 01:24:12,800 JPL's motto is Dare Mighty Things. 1254 01:24:14,519 --> 01:24:18,598 And after spending a week watching Perseverance drive over the surface 1255 01:24:18,599 --> 01:24:20,878 of Mars in search of alien life, 1256 01:24:20,879 --> 01:24:24,678 my overriding impression is that that is entirely appropriate. 1257 01:24:24,679 --> 01:24:28,117 The sheer engineering excellence, 1258 01:24:28,118 --> 01:24:29,917 the attention to detail, 1259 01:24:29,918 --> 01:24:34,997 the teamwork required to do that is nothing short of astounding. 1260 01:24:34,998 --> 01:24:40,316 It turns out that, if we try to answer the most profound questions, 1261 01:24:40,317 --> 01:24:43,316 to acquire new knowledge about the universe, not 1262 01:24:43,317 --> 01:24:47,996 because it's useful in some sense, but just because we want to know, 1263 01:24:47,997 --> 01:24:49,877 brings out the best in us. 1264 01:25:00,116 --> 01:25:02,515 But the end of our week at JPL 1265 01:25:02,516 --> 01:25:04,556 is not the end of the story. 1266 01:25:06,715 --> 01:25:10,115 Several weeks later, Ingenuity is still flying. 1267 01:25:11,595 --> 01:25:14,434 It's now clocked up almost an hour of flight time, 1268 01:25:14,435 --> 01:25:18,353 and is still sending back remarkable aerial photographs, 1269 01:25:18,354 --> 01:25:20,313 including these images 1270 01:25:20,314 --> 01:25:22,193 of the mission's parachute 1271 01:25:22,194 --> 01:25:23,913 and protective back shell, 1272 01:25:23,914 --> 01:25:27,113 that were last seen as they were jettisoned on the descent 1273 01:25:27,114 --> 01:25:28,914 on to the Martian surface. 1274 01:25:30,753 --> 01:25:34,472 Ingenuity made it to the delta in another seven hops 1275 01:25:34,473 --> 01:25:36,353 across the Seitah sand dunes. 1276 01:25:39,313 --> 01:25:41,633 And the rover kept on driving. 1277 01:25:44,032 --> 01:25:48,871 Covering the remaining 4km in just 31 days, 1278 01:25:48,872 --> 01:25:53,191 capturing some truly wonderful pictures, as it approached the steep 1279 01:25:53,192 --> 01:25:54,672 scarps of the Delta. 1280 01:25:56,791 --> 01:25:59,910 The rover and helicopter are already investigating 1281 01:25:59,911 --> 01:26:01,951 the delta sedimentary rocks. 1282 01:26:03,991 --> 01:26:08,710 And have begun searching them for the faint signs of ancient life. 1283 01:26:09,870 --> 01:26:11,989 Whatever Perseverance finds, 1284 01:26:11,990 --> 01:26:16,750 it will tell us something important about ourselves. 1285 01:26:23,909 --> 01:26:26,508 I think there are three possibilities for what Perseverance 1286 01:26:26,509 --> 01:26:28,788 might find on Mars. 1287 01:26:28,789 --> 01:26:32,748 One, which sounds like the most disappointing possibility, 1288 01:26:32,749 --> 01:26:34,827 is it sees no sign of life at all. 1289 01:26:34,828 --> 01:26:38,787 If we establish that there was water in Jezero Crater, 1290 01:26:38,788 --> 01:26:41,667 all the conditions were right - geological activity, 1291 01:26:41,668 --> 01:26:43,227 all the right ingredients, 1292 01:26:43,228 --> 01:26:46,106 and yet, life did not begin. 1293 01:26:46,107 --> 01:26:49,866 Then that may be telling us that we're alone, certainly 1294 01:26:49,867 --> 01:26:51,266 in our neighbourhood. 1295 01:26:51,267 --> 01:26:54,506 The second possibility is that we find life. 1296 01:26:54,507 --> 01:26:58,465 But the life is very similar to life here on Earth. 1297 01:26:58,466 --> 01:27:00,305 That would be... It would be wonderful. 1298 01:27:00,306 --> 01:27:02,865 We'd know that there are two planets in our solar system 1299 01:27:02,866 --> 01:27:04,265 that are living worlds. 1300 01:27:04,266 --> 01:27:07,425 But it might suggest that there was only one genesis 1301 01:27:07,426 --> 01:27:08,825 in our solar system. 1302 01:27:08,826 --> 01:27:12,504 But we know that material moves from Mars to Earth. 1303 01:27:12,505 --> 01:27:15,624 We have Martian meteorites here, and from Earth to Mars. 1304 01:27:15,625 --> 01:27:20,304 And so, then, I suppose, the story becomes, "Where did life begin?" 1305 01:27:20,305 --> 01:27:23,823 It is certainly possible that life began on Mars, 1306 01:27:23,824 --> 01:27:27,143 and was transferred here to Earth. 1307 01:27:27,144 --> 01:27:29,903 I suppose, in that sense, we're Martians. 1308 01:27:29,904 --> 01:27:31,784 What a discovery that would be. 1309 01:27:33,544 --> 01:27:37,542 The third possibility is that we find signs that life existed 1310 01:27:37,543 --> 01:27:40,542 on Mars, and that life is very different to the life we see 1311 01:27:40,543 --> 01:27:42,902 here on Earth - has a different biochemistry. 1312 01:27:42,903 --> 01:27:45,142 There was a different genesis. 1313 01:27:45,143 --> 01:27:47,422 That would mean that life began 1314 01:27:47,423 --> 01:27:51,101 separately in two places in our solar system, 1315 01:27:51,102 --> 01:27:54,061 and that will tell us a tremendous amount, because it will tell us 1316 01:27:54,062 --> 01:27:57,101 that we can assume that wherever the conditions 1317 01:27:57,102 --> 01:27:59,821 are right, life begins. 1318 01:27:59,822 --> 01:28:02,540 That will be a profound discovery, 1319 01:28:02,541 --> 01:28:04,460 will change the way we think 1320 01:28:04,461 --> 01:28:05,780 of our universe, 1321 01:28:05,781 --> 01:28:10,140 because it will mean that we are in a living universe. 1322 01:28:10,141 --> 01:28:12,500 It should change the way you look at those points of light 1323 01:28:12,501 --> 01:28:13,699 in the sky. 1324 01:28:13,700 --> 01:28:16,339 Many of them, most of them have planets around them. 1325 01:28:16,340 --> 01:28:19,859 And I think we'll be able to assume that a good number of them 1326 01:28:19,860 --> 01:28:21,180 are living worlds. 113695

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