The concern is very high in NASA as Mars landing day Arrives
Cape Canaveral, The six-month journey of the NASA Spacecraft for Mars saw its dramatic grand finale on Monday, in which scientists and engineers hoped that there would be soft precision landing on flat red plains.
The objective of Insight Lander was for the afternoon touchdown because there was a concern among people involved in the $ 1 billion international effort.
After traveling 300 million miles (482 million kilometers), through the Martin Atmosphere, the hazardous descendants of Insight, coolest ones and nerves in the stomach spread to the maximum. However, an old supporter of this, NASA had attempted landing on Mars in the last six years.
Robot geologist - Designed to detect the mysterious inner parts of Mars - Six minutes flat should be 12,300 miles per hour (19,800 km) to zero because it breaks the atmosphere of the parachute Pulls out their original engine and expects three legs.
Landing on Mars is one of the toughest single jobs that people have to do in search of planets, "said Bruce Baird, chief of Insight." It is a difficult thing, it is such a dangerous thing that there is always a great opportunity in a very uncomfortable way, it can be wrong. "
Earth's success rate on Mars is 40 percent, which is traveling every 1960 for the flyby, orbital flight, and landing by the U.S., Russia and other countries.
But the United States has pulled seven successful planetary planets in the last four decades. With only one unsuccessful touchdown, this is an envious record. Another country has been successful in establishing and operating a spacecraft on a dusty red surface.
This is a shooting for the Alicia Plantia, which is a plain near the Martian Equator, that the Insight team hopes that with some rocks in the form of parking space in Kansas if any. This is not a rock collecting campaign. Instead, a stable 800-pound (360 kilograms) lander will use its 6 foot (1.8 m) robotic arm to apply a mechanical sesame and seismometer on the ground.
Self-hammer soles will throw 16 feet (5 meters) below to measure the internal heat of the planet, while ultra-hi-tech seismometer listens for the potential marsquakes. Such a thing has not been attempted before our small neighboring neighbor, about 100 million miles (160 million kilometers) away.
No space has been used robotically from the spacecraft to the actual Martian surface. No lender has been opened in depth from several inches, and no earthquake has ever happened on Mars.
By examining the dark, dark interior of Mars - still protected from its early days - scientists have hoped to create 3D images that can tell how the rocky planet of our solar system formed 4.5 billion years ago and they are so different Why did it happen One of the big questions is that the earth made so much hospitality for life.
Mars was once flowing rivers and lakes; Delta and lakes are now dry, and the planet is cold. Mercury is the closest to the Sun, a surface that is baked positively. Venus is the furnace due to its thick, heat-stricken atmosphere.



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