NASA’s Ingenuity helicopter keeps pushing the boundaries of off-Earth flight.
The 4-pound (1.8 kilograms) Ingenuity aced its 59th Mars sortie on Saturday (Sept. 16), soaring higher than ever before in the process.
“Ingenuity has set a new record! The #MarsHelicopter successfully completed Flight 59, flying its highest altitude yet — 20 meters [66 feet]. The rotorcraft was in the air for 142.59 seconds,” officials with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, which manages the helicopter’s mission, posted on X (formerly Twitter) on Tuesday (Sept. 19).
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Flight 59 was a full hover; Ingenuity covered no horizontal distance during the hop, according to the mission’s flight log.
Ingenuity landed with NASA’s Perseverance rover in February 2021 on the floor of the 28-mile-wide (45 kilometers) Jezero Crater, which harbored a big lake and a river delta long ago.
Perseverance is searching for signs of ancient Mars life inside Jezero and collecting samples that’ll be returned to Earth in the future. Ingenuity is serving as a scout for the rover team, helping find good routes for Perseverance’s travels and identifying promising science targets to investigate.
The rotorcraft is doing this work on an extended mission. Its primary mission aimed to show that aerial exploration is possible on Mars despite the planet’s thin atmosphere. Ingenuity completed that proof-of-concept assignment over the course of five flights a few months after touching down on the Red Planet, and then it just kept on flying.
Over the course of its 59 flights, Ingenuity has traveled a total of 43,652 feet (13,304 m) and stayed aloft for 106.5 minutes, according to the flight log.
Before Flight 59, the helicopter’s altitude mark stood at 59 feet (18 m). Its single-flight distance and duration records are 2,310 feet (704 m) and 169.5 seconds, set in April 2022 and August 2021, respectively.