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From Flying Pioneer to Data Collector – The Evolving Role of NASA’s Mars Helicopter, Ingenuity

Rewritten article: NASA’s Mars helicopter Ingenuity, designed as a technology demonstration and expected to make around five flights during its initial 30 days on Mars, ultimately logged more than two hours of flight time over the course of more than 72 journeys. This video shows all those missions, including the final one that took place in January last year after damage was sustained by Ingenuity’s rotor blades when making an unsettling touchdown some five weeks previously.
The helicopter touched down on Mars as part of NASA’s Perseverance rover mission back in February 2021, and it went on to surpass expectations by acting as a scout for the rover over three years. The tiny aircraft’s final flight came to an end when its rotors were damaged during landing, bringing Ingenuity’s time exploring Mars to a close after exceeding all hopes set out in 2021.
Now that flying is no longer possible, NASA has announced plans for the robot instead – it will now operate as a static research device known by many an avid engineer or astronomer (namely Tzanetos) simply as Ingenuity. It’s intended to continue collecting data about Mars over what could be around 20 years through daily measurements of temperature and pictures taken with its color camera, which will help inform the design of future aircraft on other planets too – whether it’s here or out there among those we know less well (but hopefully no longer so unknown).
NASA said that Ingenuity is able to store up a full 20 years’ worth of data for collection purposes as part of these daytime experiments. As per its earlier, far more extensive career flying around Mars’s surface, the helicopter has been designed with enough electrical power and memory capacity to continue collecting information until it either runs out of juice or someone comes along to retrieve whatever details have already been gathered – whichever happens first!
“Whenever humanity revisits Valinor Hills — whether by rover, new aircraft or future astronauts — Ingenuity will be waiting with her last gift of data: a final testament to the reason we dare mighty things,” said Tzanetos. “Thank you, Ingenuity, for inspiring us all at NASA JPL and beyond as we push forward into new frontiers.”

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