Perseverance Rover’s Descent and Touchdown on Mars (Official NASA Video)
NASA's Mars 2020 Perseverance mission captured thrilling footage of its rover landing in Mars' Jezero Crater on Feb. 18, 2021. The real footage in this video was captured by several cameras that are part of the rover's entry, descent, and landing suite. The views include a camera looking down from the spacecraft's descent stage (a kind of rocket-powered jet pack that helps fly the rover to its landing site), a camera on the rover looking up at the descent stage, a camera on the top of the aeroshell (a capsule protecting the rover) looking up at that parachute, and a camera on the bottom of the rover looking down at the Martian surface.
The audio embedded in the video comes from the mission control call-outs during entry, descent, and landing.
For more information about Perseverance, visit mars.nasa.gov/perseverance
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Seeing HD video captured on another planet is a surreal experience.
Too hd
@@EduardoMartinez-fp6ib are you realy complaining that the video are in HD ?
@@EduardoMartinez-fp6ib no.
@@EduardoMartinez-fp6ib Technology, soon they might do a full 360° recording and we'll experience it in VR
Right?! I feel like I’m not supposed to be seeing this
What a time to be alive! Congratulations to NASA and JPL and humans!!!
hey mark :D
You also contributed with Curiosity! Thank you Sir!
Love your videos!
This is so awesome!
Mark Rober
Seeing the surface of another planet from hundreds of millions of miles away in motion is honestly incredible.
How do they control something 207 million miles away?
Its so incredible Cause its not true.
@@limyize Very slowly with radio signals, and this was preprogrammed. It took between 20-40min for the radio signals to reach Earth+ a few minutes for uploading and downloading so we never get it in real time
@@xWood4000 how are these radio signals reaching mars from earth?
@@limyize Space is very empty so there isn't much stopping you from shooting signals wherever you want and as far as you want.
1903: first sustained and controlled flight in kittyhawk 2021: freaking autonomous helicopter on mars
2069: autonomous landing on the sun
Only 66 years from Kitty Hawk to Tranquility Base
@@TS-ev1bl shoulda been 69, it wouldve been funny number
@@Mudye they wouldn't be able to do that. they would just die. or am I missing some sort of joke?
@@dextynlabelle9326 yes you are, 69 is the funny number, if you want to know why, look it up :))
This is one of the coolest things I’ve ever seen.
yep
Indeed
@@Hadfield15 yepdeed
This is amazing
Totally agree.
This is literally one of the greatest things I’ve ever seen.
Facts!! Incredible.
gives me chills
Indeed
a dead red rock in the middle of space?
@@alerey4363 go somewhere else u negative nancy
I'm an old guy, been around since Mercury, and i"m glad an achievement like this still excites me.
As a kid I read tattered library books with black & white photos beamed back to Earth from probes. I never thought I would have an experience like this. It's space exploration made real in a visceral way. Well done, JPL.
Can't wait for the KZhead algorithm to recommend this to the future people that live on mars.
Interesting... 🤔
Hm
Bro imagine future generations who will live in mars think they come from mars and not from earth ...
@@Ggjgff882 We are not gonna live in mars wtf XD
If there will be a KZhead at that point.
That's a modern day, full color, 30 FPS recording of the surface of *another planet* and humans landing something on it. Insane.
just a bunch of rocks, earth looks way cooler. maybe theres a fossil of a worm but its probably gonna be from the same asteroid that started earth/organisms on earth anyways
And some idiots believe it was filmed in the Sahara desert.
Well.... Maybe is wasn't humans that landed on Mars, but a human made rover that landed on Mars... I know... I know... I'm being nit-picky....
@@classicpinball9873 You do realize the theory that life originated from asteroids says that asteroids brought the *building blocks* of life, not a living organism itself...
@@direbearcoat7551 "...and humans landing *something* on it." ?
Sometimes I go back to watch this just to feel something.
Me too !😂😂😂
same
I watch this, the Artemis 1 launch, the Saturn V launches, the Apollo landings, and the deployment of India’s lunar lander to feel happy.
Same❤
Whenever I feel sad or just bad in general, I watch these type of videos, it makes me feel happy to be alive And for the audio quality as some comments mentioned, I think it's better this way, it adds a really unique feeling to this phenomenal accomplishment
100%. The headphones/microphones are fine
Can't believe Im watching a KZhead video filmed on Mars. Thats awesome. Incredible.
Nothing special yet
@@Heretogasunu No, it is special. It's more than what you'll ever accomplish.
@@apmire why the vilification? Mad because I'm right about this being an act?
@@Heretogasunu I would imagine it's more like frustration at your continued denial of the obvious, in the face of overwhelming evidence against your position and the utter lack of evidence supporting it.
Wow, I haven't thought about it like that...
Bruh, the camera quality from Mars is better than security camera quality back on Earth.
NASA has an entire building just to store recorded data, most security cams has a old HD in the back office room... hahaha
They are also using 20+ high tech cameras, so that might explain why they have better quality. Also the rover is HUGE, even the cameras are big. It looks like WALLE-E.
Bit more cost involved in the Mars rover. Premium package.
Ugh you know this rover cost 10 billion dollars right and that's not a video but actually 40 000 images.
They spent millions of dollars for that camera alone, so it has the best camera of course lol
I keep seeing this video even after all this time and can't help but to tear up, what an impressive thing to accomplish.
Yeah, weird because I do too.
I still shed many tears when I see that crane's final detach; No matter how many time's I've seen it. Such unfathomable amounts of work come to fruition. Such joy.
We are literally watching a video that was taken from another planet. That’s INSANE.
it's out of this world!! get it? 🤣
@@vkdeen7570 🤦♂️
holywoodstudio’s
@@vkdeen7570 😂😂😂
AWESOME THANKS 💕
I still can't believe that I got to see an actual footage of an extraterrestrial planet that's millions of miles away! Absolutely incredible!
Im in awe. Like wow
Not to burst your bubble but...actual footage existed years ago...
@@RatusMax lol fr there’s already been rovers on Mars
@@lowkeyquintin4202 yeah but not in that quality
_Extraterrestrial planet_ ? Are you sure you got that right? LOL
seeing an actual live video from another planet is mind blowing
I don’t think it’s live as it takes a lot of time to get video from Mars to Earth but a video is cool tho.
@@Prinze203It's technically not live because of the distance, but is is live in a way
@@randykitchleburger2780 The video was recorded and stored on-board Perseverance and returned during the weeks after the landing as bandwidth and scientific observations allowed.
@@b1blancer1 ahhh, interesting
Humans are so cool, man. Look how far we've come as a species. Congrats to everyone who worked on this huge project
Meanwhile aliens far away from us perfecting time travel
meanwhile theres a comment bot shitting on nasa
@@not_herobrine3752 yup pretty much
Yeah... But we also have a massive problem with infighting (war), not to mention killing the entire planet.
something that finally deserves to actually be on trending
True
Very true
Seeing an actual touchdown on another planet like that absolutely blew me away. This brought me actual tears of joy! Well done to all those who made this happen!
Check out the Japanese Hayabusa2 Probe landing on asteroid Ryugu if you haven't. Not as high quality as this but still pretty cool.
I swear I nearly cried watching this live, what a great time to be alive.
The universe is 13.8 billion years old and the earth is 4.5 billion years old, and some how we managed to be on the first people to witness this. That is real crazy.
Wow. For the first time in my life, I’m seeing a high frame rate, color, HD video from another celestial body. We have finally entered the 21st century!
Not just you. Anyone. It has never been done before and it could've been done. Not "HD" but it could've been done.
Can't wait... no matter if 10, 20 or 30 years. I want to see humans landing on Mars. In 4K.
Word,, like why didnt they show us this video when it was actually taking place though ??
@@WAVEZCLUB cause they take a bunch of pictures taken by the rover and put together to form the complete picture, only difference is now we got microphones on the rover, from images put together like a puzzle and sound, u get a video
@@WAVEZCLUB because data transfer speed from Mars is really slow. They had to save the video first and then slowly transmit it back to earth.
Just the fact we’re getting beamed direct footage of another planet entirely is incredible.
Not direct, it's a download relayed through multiple satellites (one around Mars, some around Earth), then remixed to include stuff from the JPL control center.
That's in Nevada lol
@@johndododoe1411 Ladies and Gents, we have a nerd.
It's still about 5 minutes old because that's how long the radio waves of light take to travel from Mars to earth Edit: plus 1 or 2 minutes from the broadcasting of the live stream
@@ecod7r lady's and gents, we have the type of person that continues to put nerds under a negative connotation.
Nasa deserves to be followed to all 7.9 billion human
To think that in 1903, we flew the first plane, and now we’re sending rovers and helicopters to Mars is crazy.
Ingenuity flys around on Mars carrying fabric from the Wright brother’s first plane.
So this is what living in history feels like.
...lying history...
yes all you z gen kids
@@johnjohn-cs9eu flat Mars are you?
what's so historic about this? this ain't the first rover on mars and it won't be the last..
@@johnjohn-cs9eu Your tin foil hat might be on too tight.
Just imagine all this went down hundreds of millions of miles away, autonomously without a hitch. This is the most captivating video I have ever seen. You MUST comprehend where this is happening to truly appreciate it.
11 light-minutes away, to be precise 😉
Its hard to comprehend.
@@winwoodmayall That's just mind blowing! If we had a fiber optic cable that could stretch from here to mars, it would literally have 11 minute ping XD
@@frenchfrench4514 For real! All that vast emptiness of space filled with encoded radio waves traveling at the speed of light. Incredible!
@@winwoodmayall well, ”11 minuter” is fairly imprecise. The real value would be like plus/minus 5-10%. No decent engineer or scientist would accept those kinds of errors! ;)
I listened to the entire entry and landing while on a long roadtrip. I was cheering in my car. What an incredible thing that we could ALL be a part of this accomplishment. Well done NASA!!!!
I’m very grateful to have my name on this rover along with many others
Cool! I’m sure our Martian descendants will be trying their hardest to decipher all the writings in the year 31,357 AD!
Incredible. The images are flawless. I’m so glad I survived my stupidity to live long enough to see this.
Yes sir. Faith in humanity restored.
That is what I am living for too, bro.
Agree with all you said.
You may rest now.
What’s incredible is that this is the first time these engineers could actually see their creation in action.
The inventions are improving year by year
Exactly!
Hii mark
Wasn't it hours later before they saw any footage?
@@TruAlM it takes some time for the footage to get back to earth
I’ll never get over this amazing feat of modern engineering!!! Just spectacular and beautiful to watch
if only this was real...
@@TheARAM5 Yes it is.
@@TheARAM5you guys brain are already dead
When’s I saw this I started crying. And when I heard about Percy’s mission I had the biggest smile on my face. It’s been one of my biggest dreams of mine to see a piece of mars and this rover is making it come true. Congratulations to you guys over at NASA and congrats to the JPL team! Again thank you for making one of my biggest dreams come true. Next stop is to send humans to mars!
That ending gave me chills, congrats everyone!
bruh you are literally everywhere XD, keep up the work on your channel!
They edited it a bit, but I like it. When they first called out Tango Delta the room was silent because they only meant the rover wheels touched down, but the landing wasn't over. Sky crane still had to detach & fly away. They called the landing about 10 seconds (felt like an eternity) after the TD call, then the room went nuts. Still I like this edit, chilly.
Just how many systems had to work to get it there. It a GIANT rocket, that threw it from one planet across the inky void of space to another planet. As it approached more and more hardware was used to slow it down, each part ejected, used up, thrown away. The precious cargo emerging from it's shell. Until eventually the eagle flapped it's wings and gently lowered Percy to the ground, then via the data cable, it asked Percy, are you stable? Is this ok? And Percy woke up and said, yes, this is fine. And the eagle said goodbye and flew away, discarded, to die. Anyone want to compile a list of all the components that were needed to get to Mars? I'd be super interested.
@@luisestrada9496 the signs of past life not to. The previous rovers first found evidence that water had once existed on Mars and later discovered that there are still trace amounts present. Geological features have further revealed that not only was there once water, there was a lot of it. This is due to the presence of canyons that the rovers found to have been carved out by water. Since there was once a plentiful amount of water on its surface, this leaves many to speculate if early Mars also met the other conditions for life. Thus, the search for evidence of past life begins!
Hi Chef.. I'm seeing you everywhere 🤣
It feels weird being present for history It doesnt feel like its actually happening
@W W lol
Lol Bruh those rover scenes didn't show anything but a rover floating in a weird fog bruh. Studio settttt haha FYI I'm obviously kidding hold on tight to your lugnuts conspiracy debunker nerdssss Cool stuff happening.
It's cool
Probably isnt
@W W 😂😂
Saw this broadcast live. Two years later still as exciting. Anything could have gone wrong and it was Perfect!!!
Thank you to the amazing team of engineers that helped us reach this huge breakthrough. I don’t think they are appreciated enough!!
sad to see these guys are been fooled that we had something send to mars...
Let us not forget the unsung hero that is no longer with us.... RIP perseverance Sky Crane....you did great.
Rest in Peace. Sacrificed himself for Landing.
Rest in Peace.
Well, it served it's purpose when Perseverance touched down, so there really wouldn't have been a point in trying to land it. And if we're talking about sacrifices for the landing let's not forget the atlas V, cruise stage, heat shield, aeroshell and parachute.
@@justjustin7060 Dude, all the cringe redditors are gonna wooosh you. I recommend you delete your comment before they come.
@@ortherner /r Wooooosh Sry i had to
These guys at NASA spend all their life for what we are seeing now, it’s fantastic achievement, go NASA
Go China!
@@Heretogasunu what
@@Heretogasunu china can't do this lol
@@Heretogasunu China wasn’t involved or if they were it was probably minor lol
Agreed, thank you NASA for your sacrifice to further our species. May this be another small stepping stone to a much much bigger picture.
I get emotional every time I watch this. I'm obsessed. This is AMAZING!!!
No matter how many times I watch it, I keep crying.
We used to actually live in CAVES; look how far we've come. Mindblowing....
Jokes on you, I still live in one
@@Head_in_clouds_ Cool, how is it?
among us
E-Boogie G. Humans...
still do lol
Historic. Proud of our Engineers and Scientists.
same
@@ernestoguzman6388 w0w you tO0k the tIme to rIght that wh0le thing while I just saId "same"
@@ernestoguzman6388 Most things in this era, like the rise of the left are a horrible thing but I agree, this one thing is good
@@doge8726 both sides are pretty bad ngl
@@dcvc619 No, only the left side is bad
This has to be one of the greatest videos in human history. I cant count how many times ive watched this.
I find myself watching this video almost everyday.
You are watching HD-Images from a landing Mars Rover on your cellphone. Unbelievable.
That's not true
@@marcostj01 How is that not true?
@@bricksthatcanmove9679 he's probably on a desktop lol
Wow. Way to put it into perspective. If I was to tell myself that 10 years ago, I'd have taken school much more seriously 😂 it's a great time for us to be alive, and I could only wish I was a part of this magnificent achievement. Maybe the next one though 😁
Uhh we put a bunch of humans on another celestial body over 50 years ago just to stick it to another country. This is ehh.
The joy in the announcers voice when touchdown is confirmed.
Finnaly a real Video of another planet and not just timelaps footage or pictures. incredible
Shout out to the camera man recording all of this
I thought when they said "video" it would just be like 3 frames per second, BUT I WAS NOT EXPECTING THIS!
they used a mars satellite for high bandwidth transfer.
@@mehmetdemir-lf2vm I know that
JPL Directors must be so happy they approved the budget for High Definition Cameras. Honestly, these cameras should become the "standard" for all "spacecraft" and a microphone if possible.
@@S3SSioNPotatoPot Difficult to send the data over fast enough. The rover will thus focus on pictures not video for the most part.
Right??!!
This should be on every KZhead recommandations. That’s what we call CONTENT 😃
Don't worry, youtube will recommend this to everyone in about 5 years.
I mean, it is on trending
Right?! It's so important that everyone knows about this! :D
This got recommended to me so 👌
Every time I come back to this video I am still in awe and my eyes start to get watery. Such an amazing time to be alive and be able to witness this
the comment section is wild, too
Still brings a tear to my eye. I couldn't imagine how the team felt. That is and continues to be amazing.
And I bet the first person to suggest a skycrane in a meeting twenty years ago was told, "Are you out of your mind?! NO, we're not doing that." :-D
They spoke about this in today’s NASA JPL press conference. When the sky crane team first suggested the sky crane system they got looked at as if they were crazy.
You know this is the second one to land with a sky crane right?
@@megsmith596 That why they specified 20 years ago.
The person who pushed for lunar orbit rendezvous in the 1960s was criticized also.
why they would say that?
To actually see the skycrane flying away after the orbiter touches down is incredible
It looks really cool....hmmmmm
Plus that’s exactly what they planned to happen. That’s exactly what they wanted. I’m so proud
FIRST THING TO CHECK IS CRASH SITE...NO NEED TO DRILL...SOMEONE TELL NASA
Your mom is incredible.. Nah, but it is
@@user-qs5jt4kd4p why? Perseverance's main goal is to drill, not drive around for no reason
That skycrane is a beautiful piece of engineering.
It's weird to think that as they're watching this "live", the landing had already happened many minutes ago.
The wild thing is that while NASA is reporting the telemetry information, the rover was already on the ground, the programming handling everything without human intervention. Amazing stuff.
who cares this isn't even a big deal
@@moef.5326 yes it is?
@@moef.5326 a man-made robot landing on another planet is not a big deal?
@@moef.5326 this man probably reuses tissues. Could YOU land a rover on mars??
@@Aaronnnnnn nope
Video quality from another planet: Video quality from security camera in bank: 120p
Cost of security video at bank: $10 from 20 years ago Cost of camera on mars rover: part of $3 billion high tech solutions with cameras designed for the project
Video quality from Epstien's cell = Zero p
@@mickscholl straight facts
People are cheap until it is a problem. Plenty of 4k security cameras out there.
Storage cost of video quality is your main issue. Storing 24/7 video footage of HD or UHD security cameras would require either a massive databank or you would have to delete records after a certain period, which then defeats their purpose.
I'm late but it's still gives me goosebumps Kudos to NASA & JPL
Still amazed by this achievement. Congratulations guys
The shaking of her voice announcing the successful landing of Perseverance gives me chills every single time.
Years of work finally paid off
Gave me those space goosebumps!
They're pretty good actors
@@Heretogasunu sureee
CNSA🇨🇳 better than trash Nasa🗑🤢🇺🇸
Without a doubt one of the most incredible pieces of footage ever taken. Out of the 100 billion plus humans that have ever lived, we are alive for this monumental moment. It’s absolutely surreal and an honor to witness it.
The Universe is 13 billion years old. Idk how humans have been alive longer than that
@@bruhboi4692 bruh..
Moon landings had humans driving around on another planet that's the greatest footage to date.
I dunno I think armstrong walking into the moon was cooler.
Wait until we have footage form Perseverance and Ingenuity... :)
I come back to rewatch this from time to time. I consider it human's most impressive accomplishment in my life yet.
Thankyou nasa. Thanks for what you have done for all humanity
The fact that the clips are in 2k 60fps is just... i can't describe the emotions that went trought my brain... wish my grandpa was still here to see this he would have been astonished
No doubt...nothing like this ever captured since the Apollo moon landings
Original footage on Nasa website is 4k
@QED He is talking about this footage. From rover landing.
It's truly amazing if you think about the fact that my grandfather was born before airplanes were invented and he died after they stopped flying the space shuttle. the whole history of modern flight happened in his lifetime practically.
*4k, it’s 2160x3840
Great job to everyone involved, shame about the audio. We'll just have to substitute Rick Astley again.
hey buddy
Hullo
Your voiceover will be good enough audio for this historic event
Great Scott!!
Video analysis when
I m here after chandrayan 3 successful landing
Even with all the bulls**t thats happening in the world stuff like this make restore a little bit of hope for humanity 😃
I was a child sitting in front of a black and white tv when Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon. The quality of the footage was just a little different. :)
If I were any relative of yours, I would ask you to write down your impression of each of those two memories. I would even record you talking about it. That's a unique perspective and should be recorded and cherished, relatives to appreciate or not.
Wow ♥️
Me too.
I remember, as a 6 year old, going outside and looking up at the moon. Mind blown. (For the first time).
One day we'll see the first man/woman on the Mars and that's something I look forward to.
This is the most expensive video on KZhead right now
How not to land an orbital rocket booster watching in the corner
But wait until starship gets to mars
Yup, ~ 3 billion $
Nah
Mr. Beast : Are you challenging me?
It's amazing to consider the rotation speed of Mars, it's distance away, it's revolution around the sun, the rotation of Earth at 1,000 MPH, Earth's revolution around the sun at 50,000 MPH, any obstructions that may be within the 127,000,000 miles, the 12 minutes of time it takes to send and/or receive a signal and then realize high definition footage was clearly delivered to us.
Earth doesn’t rotate at 1,000 mph. You’re using linear velocity instead of rotational velocity.
This gives me chills and tears every time I watch it.
*Fun fact* Crater "Jezero" was named after a town Jezero located in Bosnia & Herzegovina, and the name literally means "lake". People in this town are quite proud of it.
After terraforming Mars: here is Lake Lake
Yeah I am Slovenian and it is also Jezero in my language
Ok jim
@@ImieNazwiskoOK The country of Turkmenistan means "Land of the Turkish Turks." :D
In Poland "lake - jezioro".
Unbelievable.
And when they turned on the HazCam, Bernie Sanders was sitting in his chair roughly 10 meters away from the rover.
Ya
Btw mars is 131 million miles away from earth!
Ikr crazy
Indeed it is unbelievable. When I see some real evidence, then perhaps it will be believable... but I don't think that will happen.
I'll never get tired of watching this.
This is the most incredible, moving, inspirational video I have ever watched. Thank you so much for this. I really love it!
I'll be dead before I ever get to see a human on Mars 😔. Only got a few more years left hopefully this is the beginning of something big. Let's hope!
I’m sure we’ll succeed.
Don't talk like that Doris, you might be here for the next big thing!
Wait for 2024. Starship production and tests are SKY ROCKETING.
..Hang in there Doris......you never know what's on tap for all of us............that includes you too..........
SpaceX is making incredible progress on Starship, stay positive and I'm sure you will be here for that.
IMO This is a "technicolor" moment of the Space Age, or like how it feels when we remaster early 20th century clips. Those Martian dust moved beautifully!
CNSA🇨🇳better than trash Nasa 🗑🤢🇺🇸
Oh hey!
All fun and games until it gets in our clothes, that dust is hard to remove
@@xhafts uh huh, sure. And where are their car sized roverS on the Martian surface?
hello
Landing on another planet will never cease to amaze. All those different fields of science and math working together.
I will never forget the stream live, while my heart was trying to leave my body through my throat. It was incredible engineering, math and physics control right before me on my favorite alien planet
"Tango Delta.... Touchdown confirmed!" Gets me every time I replay this video. Congrats NASA & JPL!
What does Tango Delta refer to here? Just a curious question!
@@amritasc0705 Probably "T"ouch ""D"own.
@@philiplabrie700 okayy.,that's cooool 😃
I was born in 1958, I've been lucky enough to witness man walk on the moon, and to see this latest footage ( in HD) of the Mars rover landing on planet Mars. How lucky am I to be alive to see these amazing human achievements!
Me too, quite the same. Born March 1958, as lucky as you. Stephane (from France)
Totally agree guys.. I was born in 1963, & have lived the space.program since I was old enoigh to be aware of it. As a little English lad in London, i was watching the biggest adventure literally happen before my eyes, and it has been a continous stream of revelations over all.these years ever since. Apollo - Skylab- Viking- Voyager - Shuttle- Galileo - Cassini. And this is just the latest wonder to be added to that fabulous list. It has been, and will continue to be a privelidge to see the marvels of the future .
Why does this have to be about you?
That’s the most magical thing I’ve ever seen. I NEED to see this. I will never be able to accomplish my dreams because of the hand life dealt me; but seeing what other humans have done in the name of all humankind makes me so grateful to be alive. I couldn’t stop these tears if I wanted to.
Imagine working years towards this goal and watching it come to fruition! What a joyful feeling.
watching it from a remote village of INDIA. NASA made humans proud. All the best wishes for future expeditions on the RED PLANET.
CNSA🇨🇳 better than trash Nasa🗑🤢🇺🇸
@Samuel Sandoval india has done nothing for space neither has nasa(usa) China is saving the world with space
@@xhafts u r absolutely correct ,100%agree ,how do u know so much man?
@@xhafts china gave us quarantine. Thanks!
@@npatil85 you can't fault a whole virus on a nation lol. What a xenophobic thing to say.
yo, shout out to the cameramen for risking their life to shot this video
Haha
Critically underrated comment
nO tHis WaS fiLMed wItH a cAmerA oN ThE RoVEr dO soME rEseARch!!11!1!111
The cameramen never die
Also shoutout to the camera man of the first ''moon landing''. They ALWAYS get the best shots! [ROFL!!!!]
I'm joining NASA when I grow up because in mark rober so thank you mark!
It acually made me cry. So much hard work behind it and to see it succed!
When NASA promised a footage, I was expecting a 2 picture per second video but this is way better than what I thought. :D
Took a while to stream it all
NASA blurs the footage to hide the aliens. Moon landings is proof.
I'm genuinely surprised at how fast they were able to get that footage downloaded at that quality. Must have been working on it literally since landing. lol
@@WMDistraction yeah man. I love these guys
@@sparklesparklesparkle6318 Yup, but mars landing is still cool though
I don't know about anyone else but I had goosebumps the entire time
same
Same
SAME DUDE!
I had goosebumps SO HARD
Yep
I came here to prove to my friend that the Moon landings were real. He's still looking for this Mars site somewhere on Earth. That'll keep him busy for a while.
That's smart.
everytime they send a rover to mars the camera quality gets better
yeah i wonder why
Imagine if you just see a Martian chilling like “yo wtf dude”
Eating an Earth Bar))))
"The sky ppl have come father"
@A R Or maybe he just took a picture at 2:04 in on this video, you see the flash, the camera sees it too and swings out to see what it was.......
@@nicolehoey439 that was just a burn from the main craft
Knocks his entire sandwich over😂😂
Even in our darkest hour, humanity still has the perseverance to go to the stars. What a beautiful sight to see
I just remember the entire live chat saying pog when the rover touched down
"darkest hour" I think a certain generation around the 1930s and 40s would have something to say about whether a coughing epidemic was darker that what they experienced. Otherwise; this was still a beautiful thing to witness
Go to the stars? Alpha Centauri is light years away and that's the closest star to us. We're nowhere near going there, if ever.
@@geoguitar1950 You do realize it's a figure of speech right?
You wish😂
Any time my day takes a nosedive, all I need do is report HERE to see the joy, achievement, and TEAMWORK I want everyone to experience. Thanks, NASA Team!
It’s nice to see NASA went to the metric system since the Apollo days.
Even Apollo computers used metric system internally, only converting to feet for display, because that was what the pilots were used to.