1 00:00:00,700 --> 00:00:02,235 InSight Landing on Mars 2 00:00:03,602 --> 00:00:05,471 Rob Manning: Although we've done it before, 3 00:00:05,504 --> 00:00:07,240 landing on Mars is hard. 4 00:00:07,273 --> 00:00:09,375 And this mission is no different. 5 00:00:10,643 --> 00:00:13,079 The process to get from the top of the atmosphere of Mars 6 00:00:13,112 --> 00:00:17,450 to the surface we call "entry, descent, and landing" or EDL. 7 00:00:18,151 --> 00:00:19,786 It takes thousands of steps 8 00:00:19,819 --> 00:00:22,422 to go from the top of the atmosphere to the surface. 9 00:00:22,455 --> 00:00:25,391 And each one of them has to work perfectly 10 00:00:25,424 --> 00:00:27,293 to be a successful mission. 11 00:00:28,461 --> 00:00:32,165 The process starts well above the atmosphere of Mars. 12 00:00:32,198 --> 00:00:35,635 The cruise stage faces the Sun. 13 00:00:35,668 --> 00:00:39,539 It also has its radio antenna which faces Earth. 14 00:00:39,572 --> 00:00:41,674 But now we don't need the cruise stage. 15 00:00:41,707 --> 00:00:43,709 Its job is done. 16 00:00:43,742 --> 00:00:45,812 The next step, just 7 minutes before 17 00:00:45,845 --> 00:00:48,448 arriving to the top of the Mars atmosphere, 18 00:00:48,481 --> 00:00:51,184 is to separate the cruise stage. 19 00:00:51,217 --> 00:00:53,219 Before you hit the top of the atmosphere though, 20 00:00:53,252 --> 00:00:55,588 the space capsule has to orient itself 21 00:00:55,621 --> 00:00:56,956 so that the heat shield 22 00:00:56,989 --> 00:01:00,093 is precisely facing the atmosphere. 23 00:01:00,960 --> 00:01:02,528 Now the fun begins. 24 00:01:02,561 --> 00:01:06,866 The vehicle is moving at nearly 13,000 miles an hour. 25 00:01:06,899 --> 00:01:08,501 But it's hitting the top of the atmosphere 26 00:01:08,534 --> 00:01:10,203 at a very shallow angle. 27 00:01:10,236 --> 00:01:11,604 12 degrees. 28 00:01:11,637 --> 00:01:14,140 Any steeper, the vehicle will hit the thicker part 29 00:01:14,173 --> 00:01:16,642 of the atmosphere and will melt and burn up. 30 00:01:16,675 --> 00:01:19,378 Any shallower, the vehicle will bounce off 31 00:01:19,411 --> 00:01:20,813 the atmosphere of Mars. 32 00:01:20,846 --> 00:01:22,415 At the very top of the atmosphere 33 00:01:22,448 --> 00:01:25,751 it's about 70 miles above the surface of Mars. 34 00:01:25,784 --> 00:01:28,387 And the air is starting to get thicker and thicker and thicker. 35 00:01:28,420 --> 00:01:30,490 As it does that, the temperature in the heat shield 36 00:01:30,523 --> 00:01:33,059 gets well over a thousand degrees centigrade-- 37 00:01:33,092 --> 00:01:34,827 enough to melt steel. 38 00:01:34,860 --> 00:01:37,530 Over the next 2 minutes, the vehicle decelerates 39 00:01:37,563 --> 00:01:40,233 at a back-breaking 12 Earth G's. 40 00:01:40,266 --> 00:01:44,170 From 13,000 miles an hour to about 1,000 miles an hour. 41 00:01:44,203 --> 00:01:47,240 At about 10 miles above the surface of Mars 42 00:01:47,273 --> 00:01:49,842 a supersonic parachute is launched 43 00:01:49,875 --> 00:01:51,477 out of the back of the vehicle. 44 00:01:51,510 --> 00:01:54,046 Fifteen seconds after the parachute inflates 45 00:01:54,079 --> 00:01:55,915 it's time to get rid of the heat shield. 46 00:01:55,948 --> 00:01:59,418 Six pyrotechnic devices fire simultaneously 47 00:01:59,451 --> 00:02:01,654 allowing the heat shield to fall 48 00:02:01,687 --> 00:02:03,523 and tumble away from the vehicle, 49 00:02:03,556 --> 00:02:06,359 exposing the lander to the surface of Mars. 50 00:02:06,392 --> 00:02:08,628 Ten seconds after the heat shield is dropped, 51 00:02:08,661 --> 00:02:11,430 three pyrotechnically deployed legs 52 00:02:11,463 --> 00:02:14,100 are released and locked for landing. 53 00:02:14,133 --> 00:02:17,537 About a minute later the landing radar is turned on, 54 00:02:17,570 --> 00:02:20,573 sending pulses toward the surface of Mars 55 00:02:20,606 --> 00:02:22,675 as the vehicle starts to try to measure 56 00:02:22,708 --> 00:02:24,610 how high it is above the surface 57 00:02:24,643 --> 00:02:26,279 and how fast it's going. 58 00:02:27,280 --> 00:02:29,015 At about a mile above the surface of Mars 59 00:02:29,048 --> 00:02:31,417 the lander falls away from the backshell 60 00:02:31,450 --> 00:02:33,052 and lights its engines. 61 00:02:33,085 --> 00:02:36,856 And very quickly the vehicle must rotate out of the way 62 00:02:36,889 --> 00:02:38,958 so that the parachute and the backshell 63 00:02:38,991 --> 00:02:40,893 doesn't come down to hit it. 64 00:02:40,926 --> 00:02:42,862 The last thing that has to happen 65 00:02:42,895 --> 00:02:45,131 is that on the moment of contact 66 00:02:45,164 --> 00:02:48,734 the engines have to shut down immediately. 67 00:02:48,767 --> 00:02:51,537 If they don't, the vehicle will tip over. 68 00:02:51,570 --> 00:02:53,606 So if all the steps 69 00:02:53,639 --> 00:02:55,641 of entry, descent, and landing 70 00:02:55,674 --> 00:02:56,909 happen perfectly 71 00:02:56,942 --> 00:02:59,545 and we are safely on the surface of Mars, 72 00:02:59,578 --> 00:03:03,349 we'll be ready to do some exciting new science. 73 00:03:04,416 --> 00:03:06,385 InSight mission landing November 26, 2018 74 00:03:08,887 --> 00:03:12,091 NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory