Ingenuity 2.0: NASA's Next Mars Helicopter Mission

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июн 2024
  • Dive into the captivating story of NASA's Ingenuity helicopter on Mars! From its groundbreaking flights to the sudden incident that halted its mission, discover what challenges were faced and what this means for the future of interplanetary exploration. This episode unpacks the technology, the achievements, and the unexpected hurdles of operating a helicopter on another planet. Don't miss out on learning how these developments are shaping our approach to exploring Mars and beyond!
    Chapters:
    00:00 Introduction
    00:53 Achievements and Lessons from Ingenuity
    02:41 Next Generation of Planetary Helicopters
    04:05 Strategic Evolution of Mars Sample Return Missions
    06:29 Outro
    06:50 Enjoy
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Комментарии • 55

  • @Nightscape_
    @Nightscape_ 25 дней назад +3

    That Ingenuity helicopter has to be one of my favorite piece of technology humans have ever made. Talk about getting your money's worth!

  • @johndeskin9429
    @johndeskin9429 14 часов назад

    Imagine how many more scientists we would have if they told us what we already know

  • @raystevens687
    @raystevens687 24 дня назад +2

    That's why NASA needs to hire SpaceX for all there rockets 🚀 and missions to Mars they can do it at a fraction of the cost and because it's cheaper they probably even do more projects on Mars.

  • @alanmcmillan6969
    @alanmcmillan6969 25 дней назад +3

    The future lies with the use of rotorcrafts. Both on Mars and other planetary endeavours. Rovers are too slow, foŕ exploration, at present. But vital fot ground discoveries. The obvious ability of rotorafts covers gives a broader viewpoint

  • @Space30MINUTES
    @Space30MINUTES 24 дня назад +1

    Wow, the Ingenuity 2.0 mission sounds amazing! I wonder what it would be like if there were more detailed analysis of its technology? I also really like science and space research. Sincerely invite you to visit

  • @stephenfitzgerald8779
    @stephenfitzgerald8779 25 дней назад +1

    I really like the helicopter, but what happened to using the derigables?

  • @vosa8268
    @vosa8268 24 дня назад

    Perfect Machine.

  • @user-ze5tu4ck1t
    @user-ze5tu4ck1t 24 дня назад

    It Really gets me, That an Helicopter Flown on Mars is not getting the Recognition it deserves. 1st its another Planet its got to have had an awareness of its surroundings. The Input alone is Mind boggling. And I'm not a Computer Expert.

  • @perryedwards4746
    @perryedwards4746 25 дней назад +2

    The evolutions of man...

  • @AjayKumarGhosh-il2zc
    @AjayKumarGhosh-il2zc 20 дней назад

    Ingen.copter served more than expect'n.The v.2 definitely will show magic to us.As it w'd be powered by A.I.More tech.improved rovers also improve the field of research.I hope solar panels can be protected with newer technologies.But when it will start its journey.We are waiting.

  • @1stHuemanAmerican
    @1stHuemanAmerican 25 дней назад +1

    U Albinos new travel bot 😊

  • @Marc_Gagne
    @Marc_Gagne 25 дней назад +1

    04:38 Isn't SpaceX's Starship the largest and most powerful spacecraft in the world?

    • @user-dk1is9fz1c
      @user-dk1is9fz1c 22 дня назад

      It is I don't know why he said that.🤔

    • @thelazy0ne
      @thelazy0ne 13 дней назад +1

      Not currently operational... As opposed to SLS

  • @jonjosenna5581
    @jonjosenna5581 23 дня назад

    NASA should send a swarm of ingenuities.

  • @Boris_Chang
    @Boris_Chang 25 дней назад +1

    Re: the navigation issues: First off, can’t we have smaller and more plentiful rovers? Can’t they put like windshield wipers on the solar panels to clear away dust? And why not have them lay out something like 5G antennae in specific locations and have the rovers and drones use these to navigate?

    • @SeraphArmaros
      @SeraphArmaros 25 дней назад +2

      Wipers for solar panels won't work too well on Mars since the dust is very coarse and would just scratch up the panels instead of cleaning them. We've used compressed 'air' blowers before to blow off dust, but those are somewhat unreliable. As for antennae for navigation, the issue isn't so much the copter knowing where it is as knowing where it's safe to land, which does require it being able to see the landing spot.

    • @wesleybeaver
      @wesleybeaver 25 дней назад +2

      Nope on the wipers; that would scratch the panels surface and ultimately kill them. As for the beacon scheme....that would require building and transporting the equivalent of multiple Ingenuity type electronics packages to drop on the surface and forget about. Which would require either rovers to place them, or larger copters capable of carrying them (one at a time most likely). As for the tiny rovers, you run into issues of wear due to lack of size to properly seal the drive mechanisms, as well as lack of mass, making them vulnerable to wind and terrain angle.

  • @ARCENAULT
    @ARCENAULT 9 дней назад +1

    I jist got back feom mars...no big deal..texas in summer....IS MARS

  • @johndeskin9429
    @johndeskin9429 14 часов назад

    They should build a base station for the ingenuities or for all their automated vehicles/drones, with some simple yet complex robot arms that can perform maintenance and handle small repairs, and the helicopters should be easy to change parts like batteries, sensor housing and blades. Give it a solar panel, that it can extend with the help of a couple more little bots that are tethered to the station, basically an all in one mini-colonization station…. Elon I got your next project bro….

  • @simplemind7532
    @simplemind7532 24 дня назад

    Great cartoon 👍

    • @Thomas-yr9ln
      @Thomas-yr9ln 16 дней назад

      You must be a flat earther.

  • @amazeddude1780
    @amazeddude1780 24 дня назад

    Regarding your comment about the most powerful spacecraft? Starship has more than twice as much thrust as SLS. Super heavy produces 17 million lbs at launch, and the starship craft, about 3 million.Nov 2, 2023

    • @thelazy0ne
      @thelazy0ne 13 дней назад

      To be proven functional ... 😂

  • @Clessandra
    @Clessandra 25 дней назад

    Dear NASA, Please incorporate some "regular Jane's" into your planning teams, would ya?

    • @thelazy0ne
      @thelazy0ne 13 дней назад

      And a few Karens too🤭

  • @man_at_the_end_of_time
    @man_at_the_end_of_time 18 дней назад

    Bottnauts......by Boston Dynamics? If humans go, the vessel should be really large with real levels of radiation shielding and vastly better propulsion. Not tiny pop cans in space like with the old Apollo program.

  • @Nikki_Baugher
    @Nikki_Baugher 25 дней назад

    Cost savings through canceling. Update your info.

  • @TheStarzzguitar
    @TheStarzzguitar 15 дней назад

    Ballons. Blimps. Make it simple. So obvious.

  • @OliverGrumitt
    @OliverGrumitt 18 дней назад

    Mars is a place that can only be explored by robotic spacecraft. Sending people to Mars involves risks so great and the cost so huge that it simply would not be worth it. Elon Musk’s plans for a million people on Mars by 2050 are so fanciful that Bugs Bunny or Mickey Mouse or other cartoon characters like Dick Dastardly and his dog Mutley stand a far better chance of becoming President of the U.S. than those plans ever becoming reality.
    Whether a Mars Sample Return mission will find evidence of past life on Mars must be, at best, considered extremely doubtful. Any life on Mars will be deep underground, well away from the surface, bombarded by radiation from the Sun because the planet has no magnetic field or ozone lsyer.
    A MSR mission should not take funds away from other space missions, like the Dragonfly mission to Titan or the proposed probe to orbit the planet Uranus, about which we know far less than about Mars.

  • @khairulnaeim756
    @khairulnaeim756 24 дня назад

    Something not belong to you better not fake lies ... because why lots homeless people on your street soon enough they gotta reach your place....😎Arrrgg

  • @Cooky00123
    @Cooky00123 24 дня назад

    To bad they collected samples from Mars, but never thought about how to get them back, wtf.

  • @eligioortiz5783
    @eligioortiz5783 23 дня назад +3

    Billions of dollars wasted . Years with out finding nothing but Rocks . It would be better to send a craft to circle the planet in low orbit with high resolution cameras . All these years and nothing but Rocks and more Rocks .

    • @Reinventglobal
      @Reinventglobal 22 дня назад +2

      Maven already doing it

    • @chrisray1567
      @chrisray1567 16 дней назад +4

      By that logic, all of geology is a “waste”.

    • @thelazy0ne
      @thelazy0ne 13 дней назад +1

      What exactly do you think is on Mars other than rocks!?😏

    • @damagein68
      @damagein68 12 дней назад +1

      @@thelazy0ne it’s all about the water

    • @DarthVader20201
      @DarthVader20201 12 дней назад +2

      So Geology on Earth of geologist means nothing to the world