On Mars, there’s a unique kind of tumbleweed rolling across the Martian plains. These tumbleweeds aren’t plants - they’re pieces of debris from the entry, descent and landing (EDL) hardware from NASA’s Perseverance rover. The rover has been coming across many of these remnants, photographing them so that engineers can study them.
During its landing on 18 February 2021, a number of hardware elements slowed the spacecraft’s speed from 20,000 kilometres (12,500 miles) per hour when it first entered the Martian atmosphere to essentially zero when it was gently placed on the surface by a sky crane – and that all happened in seven minutes. Once their jobs were complete, EDL hardware like the parachute, backshell, heat shield and the sky crane were all jettisoned from Perseverance, crashing into Mars…