Facts
Mars 2020
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Mars 2020 is one of NASA's larger missions with a budget of $2.4 billion (over 16 billion DKK)
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Perseverance launched on 30 July 2020 and landed safely on Mars on 18 February 2021, meaning the rover has been active on Mars for almost 3.5 years.
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Only about half of the attempts to land a spacecraft on Mars with a rover have been successful.
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The stated goal of the Mars 2020 mission is to find signs of past life on Mars.
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Perseverance has a wealth of instruments, including 19 cameras, but the two most important for identifying biosignatures are PIXL (which stands for Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry and which DTU helped develop), which measures the chemical composition of rocks, and SHERLOC (which stands for Scanning Habitable Environments with Raman & Luminescence for Organics & Chemicals), which can detect organic matter and minerals.
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The rover is exploring the Jezero Crater, a 45-kilometre-wide crater in the northern part of Mars, where 3.5 billion years ago, there was a river that flowed into a large lake. The researchers believe there is a high probability of finding evidence of microorganisms in the former river delta.
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Perseverance saves the most interesting rocks it finds and puts them in tubes to be flown back to Earth where they can be analyzed with instruments too large and complex to send to Mars.
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However, NASA has cast doubt on when the Mars Sample Return mission will take place, as the original plan with a price tag of $11 billion (approx. DKK 75 billion) is too expensive. Therefore, work is underway to put together an alternative and cheaper mission, but it won't be until sometime in the 2030s. The European Space Agency, ESA, is also part of the return mission.