Getting a robot to take a selfie on Mars by Staff Writers Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 28, 2021
Ever wondered how Mars rovers take a selfie? Color video from NASA's Perseverance shows how the rover captured the historic April 6, 2021, image of itself beside the Ingenuity Mars Helicopter. As a bonus, the rover's entry, descent, and landing microphone captured the sound of the arm's motors whirring during the process. Selfies allow engineers to check wear and tear on the rover. But they also inspire a new generation of space enthusiasts: Many rover team members can cite a favorite image that sparked their interest in NASA. "I got into this because I saw a picture from Sojourner, NASA's first Mars rover," said Vandi Verma, Perseverance's chief engineer for robotic operations at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. Verma worked as a driver for the agency's Opportunity and Curiosity rovers, and she helped to create Curiosity's first selfie, snapped on Oct. 31, 2012. "When we took that first selfie, we didn't realize these would become so iconic and routine," she said Video from one of Perseverance's navigation cameras shows the rover's robotic arm twisting and maneuvering to take the 62 images that compose the image. What it doesn't capture is how much work went into making this first selfie happen. Here's a closer look.
Teamwork Everyone was working on "Mars time" (a day on the Red Planet is 37 minutes longer than on Earth), which often means being awake in the middle of the night and catching up on sleep during the day. These team members sometimes passed up that sleep just to get the selfie done. JPL worked with Malin Space Science Systems (MSSS) in San Diego, which built and operates the camera responsible for the selfie. Called WATSON (Wide Angle Topographic Sensor for Operations and eNgineering), the camera is designed primarily for getting close-up detail shots of rock textures, not wide-angle images. Because each WATSON image covers only a small portion of a scene, engineers had to command the rover to take dozens of individual images to produce the selfie. "The thing that took the most attention was getting Ingenuity into the right place in the selfie," said Mike Ravine, Advanced Projects Manager at MSSS. "Given how small it is, I thought we did a pretty good job." When images come down from Mars, the MSSS image processing engineers began their work. They start by cleaning up any blemishes caused by dust that settled on the camera's light detector. Then, they assemble the individual image frames into a mosaic and smooth out their seams using software. Finally, an engineer warps and crops the mosaic so that it looks more like a normal camera photo that the public is used to seeing.
Computer Simulations Commanding Perseverance to film its selfie stick in action is much more challenging than with Curiosity. Where Curiosity's turret measures 22 inches (55 centimeters) across, Perseverance's turret is much bigger, measuring 30 inches (75 centimeters) across. That's like waving something the diameter of a road bike wheel just centimeters in front of Perseverance's mast, the "head" of the rover. JPL created software to ensure the arm doesn't collide with the rover. Each time a collision is detected in simulations on Earth, the engineering team adjusts the arm trajectory; the process repeats dozens of times to confirm the arm motion is safe. The final command sequence gets the robotic arm "as close as we could get to the rover's body without touching it," Verma said. They run other simulations to ensure that, say, the Ingenuity helicopter is positioned appropriately in the final selfie or the microphone can capture sound from the robotic arm's motors.
The Sound of Selfies "It's like your car: Even if you're not a mechanic, sometimes you hear a problem before you realize something's wrong," Verma said. While they haven't heard anything concerning to date, the whirring motors do sound surprisingly musical when reverberating through the rover's chassis.
Jezero crater's 'Delta Scarp' revealed in new images Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 23, 2021 A Perseverance rover scientist's favorite shot from the young Mars mission provides a new angle on an old and intriguing surface feature. Ask any space explorer, and they'll have a favorite image or two from their mission. For Apollo 8's Bill Anders, it was a picture looking back at the Earth from near the Moon. Astronaut Randy Bresnik prizes a photo of an aurora he took while aboard the International Space Station. And for Vivian Sun, a scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern Ca ... read more
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