NASAβs Deep Space Mission Control Is Empty for the First Time in 6 Decades as L.A. Wildfires Rage
"It was a very emotional thing, the first time in the 60 years that nobody was actually in the mission control office there at JPL."
For nearly four years, NASA's Perseverance rover has journeyed across an unexplored patch of land on Marsβonce home to an ancient river deltaβand collected a slew of rock samples sealed inside cigar-sized titanium tubes.
These tubes might contain tantalizing clues about past life on Mars, but NASA's ever-changing plans to bring them back to Earth are still unclear.
On Tuesday, NASA officials presented two options for retrieving and returning the samples gathered by the Perseverance rover. One alternative involves a conventional architecture reminiscent of past NASA Mars missions, relying on the "sky crane" landing system demonstrated on the agency's two most recent Mars rovers. The other option would be to outsource the lander to the space industry.