NASA rover to touch down in Mars on Thursday

FILE - In this Dec. 17, 2019 photo made available by NASA, engineers watch the first driving test for the Mars 2020 rover, later named "Perseverance," in a clean room at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. (J. Krohn/NASA via AP

FILE – In this Dec. 17, 2019 photo made available by NASA, engineers watched the first driving test for the Mars 2020 rover, later named “Perseverance,” in a clean room at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. (J. Krohn/NASA via AP)

OAN Newsroom
UPDATED 7:00 PM PT – Tuesday, February 16, 2021

NASA engineers are gearing up to receive the first images of their monumental mission to explore Mars. According to reports, officials are anxiously awaiting radio transmission from their Perseverance rover.

This is a part of of a nearly $3 billion and 300 million mile mission to see if there was any life on Mars. The Perseverance is programmed to land on Jezero, a 28-mile-wide crater.

Engineers said the six-wheeled rover will face “seven minutes of terror” while descending from Mars’s atmosphere to its surface.

“Our journey has been from following the water, to seeing whether this planet was habitable, to finding complex chemicals,” NASA Associate Administrator for Science Thomas Zurbuchen said. “Now, we’re at the advent of an entirely new phase, returning samples, an aspirational goal that has been with the science community for decades.”

In this image provided by NASA, Thomas Zurbuchen, Associate Administrator of NASA's Science Mission Directorate, speaks during a NASA Perseverance rover mission engineering and technology overview, Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2021, at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. The Perseverance Mars rover is due to land on Mars on Thursday. (Bill Ingalls/NASA via AP)

In this image provided by NASA, Thomas Zurbuchen, Associate Administrator of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, spoke during a NASA Perseverance rover mission engineering and technology overview, Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2021, at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. (Bill Ingalls/NASA via AP)

The Perseverance rover is expected to finish it’s seven month journey on Thursday.

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