NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover looks back at its wheel tracks on March 17, 2022, the 381st Martian day, or sol, of the mission. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
The rover’s self-driving capabilities will be put to the test this month as
it begins a record-breaking series of sprints to its next sampling location.
NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover is trying to cover more distance in a single
month than any rover before it – and it’s doing so using artificial
intelligence. On the path ahead are sandpits, craters, and fields of sharp
rocks that the rover will have to navigate around on its own. At the end of the
3-mile (5-kilometer) journey, which began March 14, 2022, Perseverance will
reach an ancient river delta within Jezero Crater, where a lake existed
billions of years ago.
This delta is one of the best locations on Mars for the rover to look for
signs of past microscopic life. Using a drill on the end of its
robotic arm and a complex sample
collection system in its belly, Perseverance is
collecting rock cores for return to Earth – the first part of the Mars Sample Return campaign.
“The delta is so important that we’ve actually decided to minimize science activities and focus on driving to get there more quickly,” said Ken Farley of Caltech, Perseverance’s project scientist. “We’ll be taking lots of images of the delta during that drive. The closer we get, the more impressive those images will be.”
NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover will follow the proposed route to Jezero Crater’s delta shown in this animation. The delta is one the most important locations the rover will visit as it seeks signs of ancient life on Mars. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS/University of Arizona
The science team will be searching these images for the rocks they’ll
eventually want to study in closer detail using the instruments on
Perseverance’s arm. They’ll also hunt for the best routes the rover can take to
ascend the 130-foot-high (40-meter-high) delta.
But first, Perseverance needs to get there. The rover will do this by
relying on its self-driving AutoNav system, which has
already set impressive
distance records. While all of NASA’s Mars rovers have had
self-driving abilities, Perseverance has the most advanced one yet.
“Self-driving processes that took minutes on a rover like Opportunity
happen in less than a second on Perseverance,” said veteran rover planner and
flight software developer Mark Maimone of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Southern California, which leads the mission. “Because autonomous driving is
now faster, we can cover more ground than if humans programmed every drive.”
How Rover Planning Works
Before the rover rolls, a team of mobility planning experts (Perseverance
has 14 who trade off shifts) writes the driving commands the robotic explorer
will carry out. The commands reach Mars via NASA’s Deep Space Network, and Perseverance sends
back data so the planners can confirm the rover’s progress. Multiple days are
required to complete some plans, as with a recent drive that spanned about
1,673 feet (510 meters) and included thousands of individual rover commands.
Some drives require more human input than others. AutoNav is useful for
drives over flat terrain with simple potential hazards – for instance, large
rocks and slopes – that are easy for the rover to detect and work around.
Thinking While Driving
AutoNav reflects an evolution of self-driving tools previously developed
for NASA’s Spirit, Opportunity, and Curiosity rovers. What’s different for
AutoNav is “thinking while driving” – allowing Perseverance to take and process
images while on the move. The rover then navigates based on those images. Is
that boulder too close? Will its belly be able to clear that rock? What if the
rover wheels were to slip?
Upgraded hardware allows “thinking while driving” to happen. Faster cameras
mean Perseverance can take images quickly enough to process its route in
real-time. And unlike its predecessors, Perseverance has an additional computer
dedicated entirely to image processing. The computer relies on a
single-purpose, super-efficient microchip called a field-programmable gate
array that is great for computer vision processing.
“On past rovers, autonomy meant slowing down because data had to be
processed on a single computer,” Maimone said. “This extra computer is insanely
fast compared to what we had in the past, and having it dedicated for driving
means you don’t have to share computing resources with over 100 other tasks.”
Of course, humans aren’t completely out of the picture during AutoNav
drives. They still plan the basic route using images taken from space by
missions like NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Then, they mark obstacles
such as potential sand traps for Perseverance to avoid, drawing “keep out” and
“keep in” zones that help it navigate.
Another big difference is Perseverance’s sense of space.
Curiosity’s autonomous navigation program keeps the rover in a safety
bubble that is 16 feet (5 meters) wide. If Curiosity spots two rocks that are,
say, 15 feet (4.5 meters) apart – a gap it could easily navigate – it will
still stop or travel around them rather than risk passing through.
But Perseverance’s bubble is much smaller: A virtual box is centered on
each of the rover’s six wheels. Mars’ newest rover has a more sensitive
understanding of the terrain and can get around boulders on its own.
“When we first looked at Jezero Crater as a landing site, we were concerned
about the dense fields of rocks we saw scattered across the crater floor,”
Maimone said. “Now we’re able to skirt or even straddle rocks that we couldn’t
have approached before.”
While previous rover missions took a slower pace exploring along their
path, AutoNav provides the science team with the ability to zip to the
locations they prioritize the most. That means the mission is more focused on
its primary objective: finding the samples that scientists will eventually want
to return to Earth.
More About the Mission
A key objective for Perseverance’s mission on Mars is astrobiology, including the search
for signs of ancient microbial life. The rover will characterize the planet’s
geology and past climate, pave the way for human exploration of the Red Planet,
and be the first mission to collect and cache Martian rock and regolith (broken
rock and dust).
Subsequent NASA missions, in cooperation with ESA (European Space Agency),
would send spacecraft to Mars to collect these sealed samples from the surface
and return them to Earth for in-depth analysis.
The Mars 2020 Perseverance mission is part of NASA’s Moon to Mars
exploration approach, which includes Artemis missions to the
Moon that will help prepare for human exploration of the Red Planet.
JPL, which is managed for NASA by Caltech in Pasadena, California, built
and manages operations of the Perseverance rover.
For more about Perseverance: mars.nasa.gov/mars2020/ and nasa.gov/perseverance
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasa-s-perseverance-rover-hightails-it-to-martian-delta
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