How Curiosity got us to Mars - Bobak Ferdowsi

73,126 views ・ 2013-02-11

TED-Ed


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Transcriber: Andrea McDonough Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar
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About 100 days ago,
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we landed a two-ton SUV on the surface of another planet,
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on the surface of Mars.
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This is one of the first pictures we took there with our rover,
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looking out at Mount Sharp.
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I kind of cry a little bit,
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choke up, when I see this picture.
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Why Mars and why do we look at these other planets?
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Part of it is to understand our own planet --
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what's the context for us?
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We live on this amazing planet, but Mars is a lot like Earth.
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It's similar in size.
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During the daytime, it can get up to 70 degrees Fahrenheit.
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So, it's so like Earth, but at the same time,
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this is a barren landscape.
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You don't see any trees, you don't see any cactuses growing,
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anything like that.
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Today I'm going to tell you about how we got from Earth to Mars
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and why it's so cool.
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So one of the things we start with is a blank sheet of paper.
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We knew from the previous missions in 2004, Spirit and Opportunity,
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there was water on Mars in the past.
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But what's the next step?
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We're looking for an even more fundamental level of,
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what does it take to have life survive?
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And so, to have that kind of knowledge and understanding,
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we have to carry a mass amount of instruments.
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We have to carry the kind of labs
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that people have whole rooms devoted to on Earth
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inside of, essentially, a small car.
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And we shrunk it all down
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to something that weighs about as much as I do,
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and then put it inside of this rover that weighs as much as your car does.
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And that rover is now on the surface of Mars,
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but it's so heavy,
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and so it kind of takes a special challenge for us
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to make it all work and come together.
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So we look at our tool of, what do we have to land stuff on Mars?
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And one of the options is airbags.
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We've done it before.
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Airbags are pretty cool, they bounce around a lot.
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You could never put a human inside of an airbag,
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because they would get squashed.
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But the problem with airbags is, the airbags you see here,
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which landed the smaller rover -- it's like 400 pounds, the entire rover --
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were about the size of this room.
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So you can imagine the size of airbags it would take
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to land a two-ton rover on Mars.
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And they'd have to be made out of materials
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that don't even exist today,
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so it'd be some kind of exotic material that we'd have to develop
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and it may or may not work.
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So, what about rockets?
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You know, you see all the rocket ships landing in old movies,
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all rockets on the bottom -- it's a cool idea.
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It works when they're pretty light still,
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but the problem is, these rockets have to be pretty strong
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to actually softly land you on Mars.
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And so they would be so powerful they could dig holes into the ground
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and then you would just end up inside of a hole
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and not be able to drive out of it.
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So, not the best design.
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But what if I could take the rockets and move them up?
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And that's what we came up with.
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It's a rocket-powered jet pack; we call it the Sky Crane.
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Basically, this big rocket sits on top of our rover
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and when we're ready to land, the rocket hovers in place
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and we slowly lower the rover to the ground.
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And then we touch down, we're actually on the wheels,
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we're ready to drive, day one.
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But in addition to that, the scientists were like,
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"We actually want to go somewhere interesting."
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The last two missions were cool,
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but they basically landed in what was like landing in the plains or desert.
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Not very exciting.
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We all know from the exciting places on Earth like the Grand Canyon,
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those are, for the scientists, the most interesting,
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because you see that whole layer,
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you see years and years of history all in one place.
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The same thing is true for where we landed.
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We wanted to land somewhere that was unique,
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that had this crater wall where things had been dug up for us,
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where mountains were pushing things up.
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But the problem is, if you landed with the older systems,
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you could've landed on the side of that mountain and just tumbled off,
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could've been the side of a cliff, the crater wall or a large boulder.
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So we needed a kind of technology
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to help us land in a very small area,
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and that was this little guided entry from Apollo.
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We took it from the 1960s.
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We flew over like the manned vehicle, because they have to pick up men,
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you can't just land all over the place.
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And then we landed, like, spot-on in the middle.
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And in fact, it was so spot-on that when we did it,
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it was basically like a quarterback launching towards Mars --
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like a quarterback, though, that was in Seattle,
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throwing at a receiver that was moving here in Giants Stadium.
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That's how accurate we were. Kind of awesome.
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But you only get one shot,
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and so we actually have to design a system
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that we can build and test and operate,
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and so it's not just about can we get it to Mars,
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but, if it's only one chance,
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how do you make sure that one chance goes well?
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So there's all these processes to make sure things are built properly.
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Then we go out to the desert and drive around and test it.
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We fly things in F-18s to make sure the radar systems work in high speeds.
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Then, most importantly, we test the team to make sure they know how to operate it.
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We don't want to miss it because we sent the wrong command
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and now it's going to be rebooting forever.
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So, that guy Fred there, he did a lot of that.
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And then we launched it on this rocket to Mars.
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We landed 2,000 pounds on Mars,
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but the entire thing was about 10,000 pounds
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when we lifted off from Earth,
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all the fuel and the solar arrays and everything else that we needed.
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And, again, we were so accurate
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that we landed in this, like, little pin-point on Mars.
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In the meantime, though, we had to design a landing system that worked.
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And I told you about the actual physics of it, but here's the catch:
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Mars is about 14 minutes away from Earth in light speed,
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which means if I try to control it with a joystick,
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I would be always controlling to 14 minutes in advance,
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so it wouldn't work.
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So we had to give it all the smarts and knowledge it needed to make it happen.
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So we built in all these smarts and algorithms
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and told it here's what you're going to have to do,
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and it goes from basically five times the speed of a speeding bullet
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to about a baby's crawl,
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all within about seven minutes,
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which are called the seven minutes of terror,
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because I was about to throw up.
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(Laughter)
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But today we're on the surface of Mars, and this was one of the panoramas we took
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a couple days after we landed,
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and it's amazing to me, because you look at this,
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and can see the Grand Canyon,
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you can see your own planet, you can imagine walking on the surface.
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And so what we're going to do and continue to do
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is to understand what makes Mars so special
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and what makes Earth even more special
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that we're all here together today.
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So we'll see where Curiosity takes us --
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not just our rover,
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but our sense of exploration.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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