NASA Insight Robot land in Mars
NASA Insight Robot land in Mars
NASA's new robot, a US space research organization, landed successfully on Mars soil. It took 7 minutes to land on the surface from the atmosphere.
The "Insight robot" has started sending photos and information on the 'Red Earth Planet', the BBC has said.
NASA has launched a campaign to find out the internal structure of Mars and the internal structure of the vibrations. According to the US Space Research Organization, at the time of the Greenwich Standard, at 7 pm 53 minutes (Bangladesh Time 1: 53 minutes), Insight's Robot is landed on Mars.
Immediately after landing, the Mission Control Cell of California, California's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) burst out in joy.
NASA's Chief Administrator James Breedenstein the successful landings of Insight, calling it 'unprecedented'. US President Donald Trump has greeted scientists on the phone.
The robot is now in a wider, flat area of Mars; The area near the illumination line is called 'EliÅŸia Planicaia', BBC reported.
Even when entering the atmosphere of Mars, its speed was much higher than the bullets running at a high speed. After that the challenge was to reduce the speed - safely landing on the surface of Mars.
NASA says they want to know the tremor of Mars with the French-British Sissmometer on Robot. This can be found in the center of the red planet. It can be known, about the structure of the object in Mars.
Radio transmission system has been placed in Insight Robot to know how the planet vibrates around its axis.
NASA wants to dig the planet's molecule to understand how active Mars is now. That's why, with the robot, the machines capable of digging up to 5 meters have been added.
"If you take a common egg and cooked egg and rotate it together, you will see the difference between them. The reason is that the location of the fluid in the egg. Until today, we do not know, the center of Mars is made of liquids, or something difficult.do not know how big it is. Insight will tell us all these information, "said NASA's Deputy Projectist Scientist Suzanne Smrakeer.
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