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Here is how the sound of driving on the Mars sounds like as recorded by NASA Rover Persevere

Today NASA tweeted from its Twitter handle In another first, @NASAPersevere

captures the sounds of driving on Mars. This adds a whole new dimension to planetary exploration. Take a listen to the rover’s wheels crunching over Martian terrain. 

Today NASA shared the very first of its kind in which it shared the sound of the rover traveling on the moon. Here is how it sounds like

 

As the Perseverance wanderer made tracks on the outside of Mars, a touchy amplifier it conveys scored a first: the bangs, pings, and clatters of the robot’s six wheels as they turned over Martian territory.

“A many individuals, when they see the pictures, don’t value that the wheels are metal,” said Vandi Verma, a senior specialist and wanderer driver at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. “At the point when you’re driving with these wheels on rocks, it’s in real loud.”

Over 16 minutes of sounds from Perseverance’s 90-foot (27.3-meter) drive on March 7 were caught by Perseverance’s entrance, plunge, and landing (EDL) receiver, which stays operational on the wanderer after its noteworthy score on Feb. 18. The off-the-rack mouthpiece was added to the wanderer to help take the general population curious to see what happens during the score, yet mission individuals have been anxious to hear the sounds from the surface, as well.

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