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on a mission to mars I
nternational collaboration is taking Vaisala and the Finnish Meteorological Institute (FMI) to Mars onboard NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance rover. The rover launched on 30 July 2020. Vaisala’s sensor technology combined with FMI’s measurement instrumentation will be used to obtain accurate and reliable pressure and humidity data from the surface of the red planet. FMI is among the scientific partners providing
measurement equipment for the new Perseverance rover, expected to land on Mars in February 2021. The pressure and humidity measurement devices developed by the FMI are based on Vaisala’s world known sensor technology and are similar but more advanced to the ones sent to Mars on the first Curiosity rover in 2012. The new mission equipment complements the
Curiosity rover. While working on Mars, the Curiosity and Perseverance rovers will form a small-scale observation network. The network is only the first step, anticipating the extensive observation network planned on Mars in the future. The Mars 2020 mission is part of NASA’s Mars
Exploration Program. In order to obtain data from the surface from the Red Planet, NASA selected trusted partners to provide measurement instruments for installation on the Mars rover. A Spanish-led European consortium provides the rover with Mars Environmental Dynamics Analyzer (MEDA); a set of sensors that provides measurements of temperature, wind speed and direction, pressure, relative humidity, and the amount and size of dust particles. As part of the consortium, FMI delivers instrumentation to MEDA for humidity and pressure measurements based on Vaisala’s top quality sensors. “Mars, as well as Venus, the other sister planet of Earth, is
a particularly important area of atmospheric investigations due to its similarities to Earth. Studying Mars helps us also better understand the behavior of Earth’s atmosphere,” comments Maria Genzer, head of Planetary Research and Space Technology group at FMI.
The harsh and demanding conditions of Mars require the
most reliable sensor technology that provides accurate and reliable data without maintenance or repair. “We are honoured that Vaisala’s core sensor technologies
have been selected to provide accurate and reliable measurement data on Mars. In line with our mission to enable observations for a better world, we are excited to be part of this collaboration. Hopefully the measurement technology will provide tools for finding answers to the most pressing challenges of our time, such as climate
MEDA HS development. Credit: Ilmatieteen laitos, FMI
change,” says Liisa Åström, vice president, Products and Systems of Vaisala. In the extreme conditions of the Martian atmosphere, NASA will be able to obtain accurate readings of pressure and humidity levels with Vaisala’s HUMICAP and BAROCAP sensors. The sensors’ long-term stability and accuracy, as well as their ability to tolerate dust, chemicals, and harsh environmental conditions, make them suitable for very demanding measurement needs, also in space. The same technology is used in numerous industrial and environmental applications such as weather stations, radiosondes, greenhouses and data centres.
Vaisala’s BAROCAP sensors will take measurements on Mars
The humidity measurement device MEDA HS, developed
by FMI for Perseverance, utilises standard Vaisala HUMICAP humidity sensors. HUMICAP is a capacitive thin-film polymer sensor consisting of a substrate on which a thin film of polymer is deposited between two conductive electrodes. The humidity sensor onboard is a new generation sensor, with superior performance also in the low pressure conditions expected on the red planet. In addition to humidity measurements, FMI has developed
a device for pressure measurement, MEDA PS, which uses customised Vaisala BAROCAP pressure sensors, optimised to operate in the Martian climate. BAROCAP is a silicon- based micromechanical pressure sensor that offers reliable performance in a wide variety of applications, from meteorology to pressure sensitive industrial equipment in semiconductor industry and laboratory pressure standard measurements. Combining two powerful technologies – single-crystal silicon material and capacitive measurement – BAROCAP sensors feature low hysteresis combined with excellent accuracy and long- term stability, both essential for measurements in space. “Our sensor technologies
are used widely in demanding everyday measurement environments here on Earth. And why not – if they work on Mars, they will work anywhere," Åström concludes.
www.vaisala.com/en
space.fmi.fi
A United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket with NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance rover
onboard launches from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Thursday, 30 July 2020. Credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky
10 August 2020 Instrumentation Monthly
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