Skip to main content

Mars 2020 rover leaves home on 2,300-mile journey to Florida for launch

NASA’s Mars 2020 rover has completed its fabrication and assembly stages and is almost ready for its launch to Mars in a few months.

Before final launch preparations can take place, the rover needed to be transported from its home at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida from where it will launch. For the rover’s 2,300-mile trip, it was carried aboard an Air Force C-17 Globemaster cargo plane that landed in Florida earlier this week.

The event was rather bittersweet for the NASA scientists who have been working on the rover for years. “Our rover has left the only home it has ever known,” John McNamee, Mars 2020 project manager, said in a statement. “The 2020 family here at JPL is a little sad to see it go, but we’re even more proud knowing that the next time our rover takes to the skies, it will be headed to Mars.”

The rover will shortly be joined in Florida by the mission’s cruise stage and the Mars Helicopter, a small experimental helicopter that will be sent to Mars to see whether it is possible to achieve autonomous flight in the thin Martian atmosphere.

With all components for the mission in place, the final assembly stages can now begin. This involves the deployment of parts like the rover’s aeroshell, a protective covering that will keep the delicate instruments inside the rover safe during the extreme temperatures and impacts caused by launch, space travel, and landing. Other parts that had to be assembled include the descent stage and mission support equipment, which were brought first to the Air Force’s March Air Reserve Base by truck before being loaded onto C-17 planes.

The facility used for final spacecraft processing for Mars 2020 is the same on that processes the Curiosity rover, currently on Mars and exploring the Gale Crater. The next step is for all of the Mars 2020 components to be tested to ensure that no issues occurred during transport. Then the final stage of assembly and testing can begin, which will take several months.

The rover is scheduled to be enclosed within its aeroshell in late June, before being delivered to the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station’s Launch Complex 41 to be attached to a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket for launch to the red planet in early July this year.

Editors' Recommendations

Georgina Torbet
Georgina is the Digital Trends space writer, covering human space exploration, planetary science, and cosmology. She…
Curiosity’s new selfie a reminder that the plucky rover is still busy on Mars
NASA's Curiosity rover on Mars.

NASA’s Curiosity rover is back in the spotlight after the space agency shared a recent selfie snapped by the veteran Mars explorer.

While NASA's newer, more advanced Perseverance rover tends to get all the attention these days, Curiosity, which landed on the martian surface in 2012, continues to investigate the faraway planet in a bid to learn more about the distance location.

Read more
Check out this eerie Mars sunset captured by NASA’s Perseverance rover
A sunset on Mars.

NASA’s Perseverance rover recently took some time out of its busy Mars exploration to capture a striking image of the setting sun.

Snapped earlier this month and posted by the space agency in recent days, the image (below) shows an eerie glow behind Mars’ rocky landscape.

Read more
Mars helicopter Ingenuity is reuniting with Perseverance rover
NASA's Ingenuity Mars Helicopter acquired this image using its navigation camera. This camera is mounted in the helicopter's fuselage and pointed directly downward to track the ground during flight. This image was acquired on Oct. 24, 2021 (Sol 241 of the Perseverance rover mission) at the local mean solar time of 12:34:15.

The Mars helicopter Ingenuity is gearing up for its 15th flight this weekend, beginning a journey that will take it back to its landing location and reunite it with its rover buddy Perseverance.

The flight scheduled for today, Saturday, November 6, will take Ingenuity back in the direction of the Wright Brothers Field where it took its first flights, by the Octavia E. Butler landing site. The helicopter team reports that they expect it will take between four and seven flights for the helicopter to return to its original landing site. Ingenuity will rejoin Perseverance at the Séítah region before heading off to explore the Jezero river delta.

Read more