NASA’s new technology finally allows the Perseverance rover to track its location in real time

ⓘNASA

Mars global localization pinpoints Perseverance’s location

NASA’s Perseverance team has marked the first successful use of new technology to help spacecraft know their exact location. Perseverance accomplished this by taking images of its location and matching them with data from NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO).

NASA’s Perseverance rover has been exploring Mars since 2021. The rover will take pictures of its surroundings every few feet as it moves around the Red Planet, taking into account wheel slippage. However, small errors accumulate over time. On long drives, the rover can be more than 100 feet (up to 35 meters) away. When this happens, the rover will stop, thinking it may be near dangerous terrain. Then wait for instructions from Earth. This process may take a day or more. A new technology called Mars Global Localization avoids this time-consuming process.

On February 2, Perseverance’s navigation camera (navcam) took a 360-degree view of the surrounding terrain at a location called “Mala Mara.” This area is a nondescript area on the rim of Jezero Crater. The images were stitched into an overhead circular image called an orthomosaic. Onboard algorithms then matched the images with orbital images from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO). This allowed the rover to determine its location with an accuracy of 10 inches. The entire process took only about 2 minutes.

The algorithm runs on the processor Perseverance previously used to communicate with the now-retired Ingenuity Mars helicopter. This allows Perseverance to determine its own position and continue on a pre-planned route without having to stop and wait for instructions.

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