NASA Invites Citizens of the World to Observe the First Landing on Mars!
Robot landing missions to explore March 2022 is a NASA target and is of worldwide concern. NASA is not awkward to invite lovers of space and science to participate in monitoring the Mars landing mission.
As is known, Mars 2022 will land in the Jezero crater which has an area of about 45 kilometers. This crater was previously used as a river delta.
This rover robot is here on a mission to look for signs of life, look for geological features in the area, look for water and various other jobs.
NASA’s First Robot Landing Mission on Mars
There is an interesting thing about this robot explorer, there is a webcam built-in which is now installed at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).
The camera allows us all to witness firsthand the scientists who are working on testing and gathering important information from the rover robot when it arrives on Mars.
The webcam will provide content in the form of a silent video of NASA’s JPL view. You can watch and participate through live wechat with engineers and scientists at JPL and the Mars 2022 robot team. They will answer public questions regarding all kinds of content, as Dafunda Tekno quoted from BGR.
NASA also said in its statement, a live broadcast on Wechat will be held every Monday to Thursday at 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. US time. While watching, the public can also chat with the team.
For those who want to take part in the NASA mission, all you have to do is fill out a simple form before September 30 through the NASA website. After that, you will also get souvenirs in the form of tickets and also ‘frequent flyer’ points of up to hundreds of millions of kilometers.
In addition, later names that have registered will be written using an electron beam on a microchip. The written name is so small that the microchip can accommodate one million names.
So far, there have been a total of about 6.8 million registrants from various countries who will also be flown to Mars.
For Indonesian citizens, there have been enough registrations. Before this article was published, there were already 8,000 registrants, thus making Indonesia 14th on the list of flying to Mars.