After Three Years on Mars, NASA’s Ingenuity Helicopter Mission Ends
After Three Years on Mars, NASA’s Ingenuity Helicopter Mission Ends

After Three Years on Mars, NASA’s Ingenuity Helicopter Mission Ends

After Three Years on Mars, NASA’s Ingenuity Helicopter Mission Ends
After Three Years on Mars, NASA’s Ingenuity Helicopter Mission Ends
Flying on Mars is a lot harder than flying on Earth. If you don't believe me, listen to this developer of the flight sim X-Plane. The fact that they were able to get it to work at all is astounding.
So, we should fly on Jupiter instead, right?
Next flight is scheduled for Titan, which is a lot easier. The gravity is lower, but there's a lot more atmosphere, which means our helicopter can be nuclear powered!
Is that even possible? I mean… with how volatile and exotic the atmosphere is, wouldn’t what a craft would be doing be more akin to how a submarine travels under water? Would “flying” even be the correct term? Wouldn’t it be more like navigating violent torrents of differently-dense gaseous layers? Some of which are (sometimes) liquid?
What would one even call that?
That was really interest.
You could hear the excitement in their post!
Interesting. I was wondering how it would work at all with such a thin atmosphere. The author could chill out a bit though.
I think Veritasium has a video about this as well