Your definition of "clearly visible" must be different from mine.
I wonder if they couldn't spin it up and see how it catastrophically destructs. Granted that'd immediately remove any benefit of static logging. But since it can't talk directly to earth anyways.... watch it with the rover while it destructs.
Even though it obviously can't fly anymore, is there any chance they could drive Perseverance over to it, pick it up and take it to some particularly interesting spot to use Injenuity's camera and whatever sensors it has to observe whatever?
The terrain (deep sand) is too dangerous for the rover to traverse across (it could get stuck and that would be mission over for the rover) Even if it could traverse across, there is no way to pick up the helicopter. Instead the helicopter will spend the rest of its days waking up every morning and listening for a transmission from the rover for a total of 50 minutes, if it gets no signal during those 50 minutes, it will sleep until the next day and repeat until it is no longer able to wake up. Since flight 72 the Helicopter has sent back over 2,300 images.... Link to all those images: https://mars.nasa.gov/mars2020/multimedia/raw-images/?begin_sol=1036&end_sol=1136&af=HELI_NAV,HELI_RTE
Gotcha. Sounded like a thought anyways, that sucks, but it is what it is.
Thanks for the detailed comment and the link ๐
No. The rover has no way to pick it up and also the cameras on Ingenuity aren't any good so it wouldn't be worth it.
Meh, sounded like a thought, oh well.
I liked it!
NASA's Perseverance Mars Rover
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