JPL.NASA.GOV: Feature Stories Follow this link to skip to the main content
Follow this link to skip to the main content
NASA Logo - Jet Propulsion Laboratory Follow this link to skip to the main content    + View the NASA Portal

JPL Home Earth Solar System Stars & Galaxies Technology
Solar System
Images Multimedia News Missions Public Services Kids Education About JPL
Jet Propulsion Laboratory NASA Caltech Jet Propulsion Lab CalTech
top stories
news releases
feature stories
spotlights
profiles
mission facts sheets
mission press kits
media visits
media contacts
newsletter
annual reports

Receive JPL news
  + Free Public E-mail
  + RSS feed
  + Media E-mail List

  

Site Tools
  + Accessibility
  + Multimedia players

Features

parachute open
+ Larger image
This image shows a perfectly functioning parachute with the canopy fully open at the opposite end of the wind tunnel after being fired from the cannon. Image credit: NASA
engineers inspect parachute lines
+ Larger image
Two engineers inspect parachute lines after a test. Image credit: NASA
Related Links:
+ Mission home page

Tools:
+ Print this article
+ Join e-mail list
No Speed Limit on Mars
April 04, 2008

It's a good thing there's no speed limit on Mars, because the next parachute to fly to the red planet will deploy faster than you can legally drive on a California freeway! The chute is designed to slow the Mars Science Laboratory as it rockets through the Martian atmosphere at more than twice the speed of sound and places a car-size rover on the surface. At its carefully selected landing area, the spacecraft's rover will use an advanced suite of instruments to assess whether the environment has ever been favorable for microbial life.

Engineers recently tested two parachute packing techniques in the world's largest wind tunnel at NASA's Ames Research Center. They loaded each chute into a cannon and aimed it down the middle of the tunnel. They then fired the cannon -- horizontally -- at 85 mph and let the parachute fly! Finally, they looked for damage to line attachments and other parts. All four tests were successful. They are now reviewing a veritable "jet stream" of high-speed video data to select a final parachute design for the mission, scheduled for launch in the fall of 2009.

For more information, visit http://marsprogram.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/




Written by Linda Doran
Media contact: Guy Webster/JPL
818-354-6278
Privacy / Copyrights FAQ Contact JPL Sitemap
Link to www.usa.gov   View NASA Home Page
Site Manager:
Webmasters:
  Susan Watanabe
Tony Greicius, Martin Perez