Outstanding Students Can Get Messages Beamed to Them By The Mars Rover Pasadena Now – Pasadena Now

Posted: December 22, 2021 at 1:33 am

Teachers, educators, and community members throughout the U.S. can nominate their favorite students in Grades 6 to 8 who have demonstrated that they have the right stuff to move past obstacles and reach their academic goals to NASAs Youve Got Perseverance awards opportunity.

The program, NASA says, will reward students whove shown that dedication with recognition all the way from Mars, courtesy of the space agencys Perseverance Rover.

The JPL Mars Rover team will honor these students by sending them personal messages beamed by the Rover from the Red Planets Jezero Crater, which it has been exploring since landing in February 2021.

Getting NASAs heaviest, most sophisticated Rover yet onto the surface of a planet hundreds of millions of miles away is a remarkable feat unto itself, Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administrator of the agencys Science Mission Directorate, said. But to do so in spite of the safety restrictions during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic required extraordinary perseverance. And so does forging ahead as a student when the pandemic dramatically altered so much of your day-to-day life.

Teachers and community members have four opportunities to nominate students for the Youve Got Perseverance program.

Perseverance is the most complex robotic system weve ever sent to another planet, Perseverance Project Manager Jennifer Trosper of NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena said.

It has to autonomously drive five times faster than any other Mars Rover and use its science instruments to carefully select and then collect over 30 samples for pickup by a future mission, Trosper continued.

When sending instructions to Perseverance, engineers can command the Rover to echo a message back to Earth. NASAs Curiosity Rover, which has been on Mars since 2012, used the method to welcome Perseverance when it landed.

We also wanted to give some young students the opportunity to talk to our team and ask questions, said Trosper.

When the personalized messages are transmitted from Mars, the students will have a chance to share the experience with family and their classrooms via a live video chat with Perseverance Rover team members in mission control at JPL. Trosper hopes that connecting students with her team will help them see how the scientists and engineers also face challenging situations and succeed through perseverance.

The Rover brought up to seven new science instruments to Mars, including a technology demonstration to generate oxygen from the Martian atmosphere, plus the Ingenuity Mars Helicopter.

After all the planning, designing, and most of the spacecraft building, we had to dramatically change how we worked because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Trosper said. To stay safe, most team members, including Trosper herself, teleworked.

We had to finish the development and testing, as well as operate this complex Rover, with much of the team working remotely. It was almost to the point where you wondered, Is this really doable? But we just kept moving forward, faced head-on whatever issue came up, and overcame each challenge, one by one, she said.

Now the team wants to encourage the next generation to persevere in the same way to embrace the idea of overcoming seemingly impossible challenges.

Nomination windows for the Youve Got Perseverance award are planned throughout the 2021-2022 school year. Selection will be made through a lottery, with entries screened to ensure they meet the criteria. All nominated students can receive a certificate to acknowledge their perseverance.

To find out how to nominate students, visit https://go.nasa.gov/gotperseverance.

Get all the latest Pasadena news, more than 10 fresh stories daily, 7 days a week at 7 a.m.

Originally posted here:

Outstanding Students Can Get Messages Beamed to Them By The Mars Rover Pasadena Now - Pasadena Now

Related Posts