• NASA’s Perseverance rover has landed on Mars following a 239 million-mile journey through space
  • It traveled  around 12,000mph and will deploy a parachute to slow down before landing safely on the surface
  • The sky crane performed the same landing maneuver as with Curiosity using long Nylon cords 
  • The crane released Perseverance from its grasp and flew to safety, allowing the rover to start its journey 
  • Perseverance will search for biosignatures in the Jezero crater that is said to be an extinct lake
  • It will collected samples and cache them across Mars for a separate mission in 2023 to retrieve

NASA’s Perseverance rover has successfully landed on Mars following a 239 million-mile journey.

The rover survived the ‘seven minutes of terror’ when it endured tumultuous conditions that battered the craft as it entered the Martian atmosphere and approached the surface.

‘Touchdown confirmed! Perseverance safely on the surface of Mars, ready to begin seeking signs of past life,’ flight controller Swati Mohan announced to colleagues.

Perseverance shot like a speeding bullet through the atmosphere going 12,000mph and successfully deployed the sonic parachute which slowed it down to make a soft landing on the surface.

It descended down on the parachute, the backshell separated and the sky crane maneuver carried Perseverance to the ground attached to long Nylon cables.

Perseverance touched down at the base of an 820-foot-deep (250 meters) crater called Jezero, a former lake which was home to water 3.5 billion years ago.

The Martian surface is littered with craters but what makes Jezero Crater so special is that it an inflow and outflow channel, which suggests it was filled with water some 3.5 billion years ago.

Thomas Zurbuchen, of the NASA Science Mission directorate, said: ‘It was an exciting day to think we’re looking to bring samples of Mars back to Earth.’

‘We’re turning our rover into a robotic geologist and astrobiologist, collecting samples that we will be bringing back to Earth, that is what we’re looking forward to.’

NASA's Perseverance rover has successfully landed on Mars following a 239 million-mile journey through space. Moments after touchdown, Perseverance beamed back its first black-and-white images from the Martian surface

NASA’s Perseverance rover has successfully landed on Mars following a 239 million-mile journey through space. Moments after touchdown, Perseverance beamed back its first black-and-white images from the Martian surface

The descent of the $2.2billion car-sized spacecraft was lived stream as it went through the 'seven minutes of terror' when it endured tumultuous conditions that battered the craft as it entered the Martian atmosphere and approached the surface

The descent of the $2.2billion car-sized spacecraft was lived stream as it went through the ‘seven minutes of terror’ when it endured tumultuous conditions that battered the craft as it entered the Martian atmosphere and approached the surface

Moments after touchdown, Perseverance beamed back its first black-and-white images from the Martian surface.

Radio signals between Perseverance and NASA took 11 minutes to be sent due to the time it takes for the signals to travel all the way to Mars and back again.

As a result, Perseverance’s on-board computers and 19 cameras were entirely responsible for the descent.

The spacecraft carrying the rover separated ten minutes before atmosphere entry and Perseverance will then enter Mars’ atmosphere at around 12,000 miles per hour.

This rapid speed generated a huge amount of air resistance and friction which warmed Perseverance up to an enormous temperature in excess of 2,000°F.

The brunt of this thermal energy is absorbed by a heat shield, which sits between the rover itself and the outside.

Perseverance touched down at the base of an 820-foot-deep (250 meters) crater called Jezero, a former lake which was home to water 3.5 billion years ago. Pictured is one of the first images the rover sent back after landing on the Martian soil

Perseverance touched down at the base of an 820-foot-deep (250 meters) crater called Jezero, a former lake which was home to water 3.5 billion years ago. Pictured is one of the first images the rover sent back after landing on the Martian soil