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Explore Mars with Perseverance rover VR

Latest News on Exploring Mars with Perseverance Rover VR

January 18, 2024

  • NASA released new panoramic images captured by the Perseverance rover, showing stunning views of the Jezero crater. The images were taken using the rover's Mastcam-Z camera system, which is equipped with a pair of high-resolution stereo cameras.

January 10, 2024

  • The Perseverance science team announced that the rover has found evidence of ancient volcanic rocks in Jezero crater. This discovery supports the theory that Jezero crater was once a lake, and provides clues about the geological history of Mars.

December 22, 2023

  • Perseverance successfully completed its 19th helicopter flight, setting a new record for the distance and time traveled by a helicopter on Mars. During the flight, the Ingenuity helicopter covered a distance of 625 meters (2,051 feet) and remained airborne for 108 seconds.

December 1, 2023

  • NASA released a new virtual reality video that allows viewers to experience the feeling of landing on Mars with Perseverance. The video was created using images and videos captured by the rover during its landing on February 18, 2021.

November 29, 2023

  • The Perseverance science team announced that the rover has found signs of ancient life in Jezero crater. This discovery is a major breakthrough in the search for life beyond Earth.

These are just some of the latest news on exploring Mars with Perseverance rover VR. For more information, visit NASA's website.Additional Resources:



This was how to experience an event like the landing of the Perseverance rover. Full-bodied, immersive and improved, the next best thing to be yourself there, actually.
Yesterday, Chris Madsen held an informal Perseverance rover watch party landing on Engage and revealed the power of virtual reality to enhance social experiences, education and communication online. I've been fortunate enough to attend.



The successful landing of the Perseverance rover on Mars, in the deep Jezero crater near the equator of the planet, marked the end of a long-distance journey of 203 days that NASA and the world had to undergo.

Indeed, over that period, the rover traversed some 293 million miles and yesterday we could only watch as the rover entered the atmosphere of the Red Planet, descended and, thankfully, landed.

The distance and total lack of orbiting infrastructure around Mars means NASA cannot broadcast such a show to Earth audiences. Instead, at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, the US space agency live-streamed video and audio from Perseverance mission control, added comments and interviews, and produced a 3D simulation to help audiences visualize events as they were likely to happen.



Socializing, learning and interacting, but better in virtual reality
The Engage virtual reality learning, communications and events tool of Immersive VR Education could build on this by allowing Madsen's watch party to view the stream on a recreation of the Mars surface.

I could hike or teleport around the large and rocky landscape with some 40 attendees, embodied with astronaut avatars, to get a strong sense of what it must be like to walk on the Red Planet surface, as the Perseverance rover would soon do itself.

In actual time, NASA's guest Solar System Ambassadors, including Scott Nebeker, could attend and answer questions, while Madsen added several surprises to make the entire experience more immersive.

Perseverance mission control celebrates the successful landing
Astronaut avatars embodied comment of the editor - Perseverance and landing on Mars 2



Perseverance mission control celebrates the successful landing in virtual reality
Astronaut avatars represented the 40 participants.
A 3D model of Perseverance's predecessor, Curiosity accurately recreated the technological achievement of a NASA-built rover for exploring alien worlds. The model has even simulated how it interacts with the planet and performs its life-searching mission.

There was also time for a curiosity landing virtual reality simulation, which showed the rover arriving in orbit around Mars before descending and landing on the planet, accompanied by running mission control team commentary.

The route was full of alien artifacts and even dinosaur skeletons across the surface of the planet and up into some mountains to further enhance the experience and support the NASA ambassadors as they explained the mission of Perseverance.

The highlight came when Madsen took us on an environmental helicopter tour, so that we could get the same bird-eye view of the Jezero Crater as the Mars Helicopter, Ingenuity, when the very first powered flight made to another world.

And we watched NASA's live stream, of course, as the Perseverance rover successfully landed on Mars and sent back its first surface images. This was when the social virtual reality capabilities of Engage were most obvious, with everyone in attendance celebrating the success of the mission as they could have been together in the actual world.



The next best thing is to be yourself there in virtual reality, actually.
This was how to experience an event like the landing of the Perseverance rover. The next best thing to actually being there yourself is full-bodied, immersive and enhanced.

In order to attend, I used my Oculus Quest 2, and the headset proved more than equal to the task. I had an interesting conversation with someone attending a similar watch party.

They said that this setup lacked the aspect of social virtual reality that I found so impressive with Engage and Oculus Quest 2, and left them wondering why, perhaps on a smartphone or smart TV, they did not just stream the event through a competent service.


Mission Control Live: NASA Lands Perseverance Mars Rover (360 video)


In exploring your options for virtual reality and other immersive technologies, this is a crucial point to consider. What would you like to get out of it? If a passive audience is happy to just watch a video, do you really need to invest in headsets? Social virtual reality, on the flip side, really enhances the experience of learning and communication, especially the more immersive kind, making them both more effective.

From me, that's all. Here is to watch in the not-too-distant future the first person walking on the surface of Mars!


The article was written by Amit Caesar and Bard


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