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Downloaded from
YTS.MX

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NARRATOR: A spacecraft
is closing in on Mars

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at 12,000 miles an hour.

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Official YIFY movies site:
YTS.MX

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In a few minutes,

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the Perseverance rover
will be on the ground.

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It's on a mission
like nothing ever done before.

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Searching for traces of life
in an ancient river delta.

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And collecting samples
for return to Earth.

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To get this far, its creators have endured
gut-wrenching setbacks,

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and a global pandemic.

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Thousands of people played
a role to make this happen.

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But only a few have ever touched
this marvel of human ingenuity.

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It takes great minds
to build something like this.

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It also takes great hands.

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ADAM: A spacecraft.

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A NASA spacecraft
of highfalutin, big ideas,

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but in the end, it is handmade.

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It's put together by technicians.

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And so, you have this great contrast
between heady theoretical ideas,

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and engineering science,
and craftsmanship, workmanship.

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And by the way, it's... that's a big deal.

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Because all the heady ideas
don't go anywhere

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without it coming together the right way.

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We're gonna stick the spacecraft
on a rocket,

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light it up, and hurl it off towards Mars.

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There will be no intervention
once we're done with this.

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We're gonna have what we have.
And if something's not right,

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or if there's a little tiny machine screw
rattling around in there...

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we're gonna... this...
the whole mission can be lost.

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MOOGEGA: As you design
and build a spacecraft,

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there are always hurdles that come up,
it's never perfect,

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it's never exactly as you plan.

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So, engineers obviously are critical
and pivotal to designing and testing.

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But the flight techs, they're the people
making sure that what they put together

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is going to work on Mars.

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It's crucial to have everyone
hand in hand, working together.

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-MALE TECH 1: Okay, crane ops.
-MALE TECH 2: Crane ops.

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CHRISTIAN: You don't have to have
a college degree to do this,

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but all us techs do have a role.

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It's not like you can go on Amazon
and order one of these spacecraft.

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-MALE TECH 1: Good?
-MALE TECH 2: Yeah, it sure is.

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JIM: Flight technicians are
the only group that's allowed

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to handle flight hardware.

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MALE TECH 1: Okay.
Zack wants to do the first.

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JIM: We're unlike any other place
on the planet.

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We're not industry,
we're not pushing the techs

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to get things done quickly,
it's all about perfection.

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(RATTLING)

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LACK: We're mechanics,
putting together a spacecraft.

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It might be a little bit
more sophisticated than being

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a grease mechanic, you know,
on an engine,

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but basically, we're, you know,
just space mechanics.

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MALE TECH: You just tell me you...

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MICHAEL: We're good with our hands,
so we're good with tools, you know.

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This is what I do

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and if that leads to building
a spacecraft, then that's what I build.

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JAMES: My understanding of theoretical
and design elements is limited,

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but I'm the caretaker
of many years of scientific effort.

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Countless man hours
of mechanical engineers,

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the design engineers.

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So, behind that one piece
could be hundreds of people.

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And we are entrusted with that system.

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NARRATOR: Perseverance
has the same basic design

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as the curiosity rover
that's been on Mars since 2012.

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But the payload is all new.

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The centerpiece
is a complex robotic system

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to drill and cache samples
of Martian rock

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for return to Earth by a future mission.

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WILLIFORD: The idea of sending spacecraft
to Mars,

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grabbing some samples
and bringing them back,

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this is something that scientists
and engineers have wanted to do

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for a very long time, many decades,

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because they might hold
signs of ancient life.

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(RUMBLING)

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NARRATOR: A device called MOXIE
will attempt to extract oxygen

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from the thin,
carbon dioxide atmosphere of Mars,

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paving the way
for future human missions, if it works.

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MALE TECH: One more above now.

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NARRATOR: There will also be
an experimental helicopter.

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The first attempt to fly
a rotor-driven aircraft on another planet.

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This team could be the Wright Brothers
of Mars.

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MIMI: Flying a helicopter on Mars
is a game changer.

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Introducing the entire aerial dimension
to exploring a planet.

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(BLADES WHIRRING)

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I mean, how often do you get
a chance in a lifetime, right?

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To go for first-of-a-kind?

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NARRATOR:
Dozens of iconic spacecraft

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have come together at NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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over the past 60 years.

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Every one of them, born from the marriage
of visionary engineering,

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and elite hands-on skills.

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MALE TECH: Uh, we're gonna go east.

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NARRATOR: At this level,
some of those hands-on skills

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are as unique as the hardware
they're building.

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ADAM: You can go to school
to train to fix jet engines,

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because there's lots of jets,
and they need jet engine technicians,

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but there's no school
for spacecraft technicians that I know of.

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NARRATOR: The closest thing
to a school for flight technicians

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is JPL's legendary Building 18.

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JIM: This is the hub
for the flight technicians.

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One of the oldest buildings on the lab.

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It's been here about 60 years,
and from here,

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we're dispersed all across the whole lab.

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NARRATOR: Jim Pearson started
as a flight tech more than 25 years ago.

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Now, he's the boss, and head talent scout,

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recruiting people with the right stuff
to work on spacecraft.

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JIM: I'm looking for an attitude.

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Somebody who's willing to dig deep.

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Somebody who can understand
the importance

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of the work that we're doing.

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JAMES: If you can come in
with the right mindset,

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then you can be trained
how to work on spacecraft.

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I remember very clearly
the first hole I drilled.

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Here I am, with a drill, in a clean room,
with four people watching me,

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and I'm dealing with hardware
that's worth millions of dollars.

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So, if I mess up,
that could be catastrophic.

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So... and I was reminded of that
before I did it,

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and I was sweating,
I was sweating bullets.

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STEVE: Prior to JPL,
I was working in a bike shop.

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You know, I'm used to having grease
and dirt under my cuticles.

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So, coming into a clean room

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is a big eye-opener.
It was a culture shock.

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You don't wanna be too fast moving.

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You don't wanna bump into anything.

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You don't wanna... drop something.

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You don't want to...

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disturb this zen.

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IVAN: I've had nightmares about this.

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I do not wanna be the one person
that's going to ruin this for everybody.

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ADAM: The technicians
are a bit like... a surgeon.

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In that...

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a slip of the hand... um, a mistake,

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and you really can lose the patient.

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So, they have tremendous responsibility.

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PATRICIA: Gotta make sure there's room.

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NARRATOR: The stakes are high
and everyone knows it.

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Even the veterans feel the pressure.

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PATRICIA: You have to be able
to really kind of block it out,

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and not get nervous,
even though they could say,

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"Oh, that's a two million dollar camera,"
you know.

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And so, you just say, "Don't tell me."
(LAUGHS)

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MICHAEL: I put in six screws in one day,

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and come home exhausted
because my level of focus

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on those six screws was so intense.

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They have to be so perfect,
everything has to be so right

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and exact that you come home
and go, "Why am I so tired?

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"All I did was six screws."

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It comes back to the complexity
of what we're building.

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You can't do this and not have problems.

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It's not that simple.

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ADAM: Look, I'm an engineer.

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Up here, on this floor,
in our offices where we engineer

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the spacecraft,
it's intellectually collaborative.

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"Whoa, what's...
that's an interesting idea you have.

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"I like that." Right?

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"Let's think about that."
Blah, blah, blah.

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Down there, it's actual
touch labor collaboration.

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It's arduous. It's amazingly complicated.

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When you design a spacecraft,

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one of its greatest challenges
is actually being made.

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And that's the techs.

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NARRATOR: In March 2019,
16 months before launch,

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the spacecraft is in its final phase
of construction

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in JPL's Spacecraft Assembly Facility.

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The rover is still a box full of wires.

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Three-and-a-half miles of it,
with 22,000 wired contacts.

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It won't get its name,
Perseverance, for another year.

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For now, it's just "The 2020 Rover,"

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still waiting for its wheels, robotic arm,
cameras, and all the rest of its toolkit.

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Meanwhile, it's filling up
with the electronics

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that will run all the hardware
still being built.

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ADAM: We have this phase
of the mission called ATLO,

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which means, Assembly, Test,
and Launch Operations.

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But along with being
a phase of the mission,

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it's this army of people,
it's like a Seal Teams almost,

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very carefully chosen,
very select group of people,

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that physically build our spacecraft.

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JIM: ATLO is where
everything comes together.

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The integration
of all the major components.

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The ATLO team will eventually
be on the launch pad.

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They'll be conducting
launch pad operations.

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NARRATOR: The ATLO team is responsible
not only for assembling the spacecraft,

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but for making sure that it works

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as a system
when all the parts are put together.

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The rover doesn't fly to Mars by itself.

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The cruise stage manages
the journey from Earth to Mars.

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Then separates just before arrival.

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Then comes
the "Seven minutes of terror..."

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as the spacecraft decelerates
from 12,000 miles an hour

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to a gentle touchdown.

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Radio commands at the speed
of light will take 11 minutes

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from Earth to Mars,
so the spacecraft is on its own.

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The aeroshell carries it through
the fiery collision

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with the Martian atmosphere.

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Then, deploys the parachute
from its mortar.

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(PARACHUTE FLUTTERS)

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NARRATOR: The heat shield drops off.

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And the rocket-powered descent stage
takes it the rest of the way in.

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Finally,
there's the acrobatic sky crane maneuver.

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And then, the rover is on Mars.

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FEMALE TECH:
Let's start pushing north east.

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MALE ENGINEER: North east.

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Slowly.

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NARRATOR: Over the next few weeks,

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they'll be temporarily stacking
all those parts together

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for a brutal series of tests,
simulating the trip to Mars.

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The rover's not ready yet,
so they have a mass model dummy inside

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to get the correct weight
and center of gravity.

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JIM: It's major work.
It's heavy lifts, critical lifts,

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millions of dollars in hardware.

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So, the smallest little mistake
can be huge.

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-MALE TECH 1: On the crane.
-MALE TECH 2: Crane.

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-MALE TECH 1: East, slow.
-MALE TECH 2: East, slow.

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(OBJECT CLACKING)

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NARRATOR:
Engineers direct the lifts,

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but only technicians,

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and only the most experienced
can operate the crane.

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-TONI: Okay, stop.
-MALE TECH: Stop.

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DAVID:
It's a potentially dangerous situation.

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And so, doing it safely,
making sure you have

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everything hooked up right,

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making sure
you haven't missed something is key,

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and that's a place
where experience comes into play.

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MICHAEL: You're now swinging
a few tons in the air.

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And there are hazards there.

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By the sheer size of the spacecraft,
you can't see all around it.

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You have to trust that that person
on the other side is doing their job.

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MALE TECH: Down on, slow.

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TONI: Okay.

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JAMES: There are certain key moments
that...

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it just takes your breath away.

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Seeing the spacecraft stacked
for the first time,

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you're reminded that this is real,
this is happening,

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this massive collaboration.

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And I have all of that work in my hands.

237
00:14:10,057 --> 00:14:11,767
At that point, you saw

238
00:14:12,268 --> 00:14:14,311
the complete spacecraft
that's gonna fly to Mars.

239
00:14:22,444 --> 00:14:24,530
NARRATOR: The stacked spacecraft
is now ready

240
00:14:24,655 --> 00:14:26,824
for its first major system test.

241
00:14:30,411 --> 00:14:34,540
Over the next 12 days,
inside a space simulation chamber,

242
00:14:34,957 --> 00:14:37,710
it will have to prove it can function
in the frigid vacuum

243
00:14:37,877 --> 00:14:41,505
of deep space on its seven-month journey
to Mars.

244
00:14:48,095 --> 00:14:51,140
WILLIFORD:
Has life ever existed beyond Earth?

245
00:14:51,640 --> 00:14:53,767
Does it today? Has it ever?

246
00:14:54,226 --> 00:14:56,896
Has life ever emerged
on another planet?

247
00:14:57,479 --> 00:15:00,107
You know, as astrobiologists,
we believe it must have.

248
00:15:00,232 --> 00:15:01,817
But right now, we have no evidence.

249
00:15:02,818 --> 00:15:03,944
So, we're going to Mars,

250
00:15:04,028 --> 00:15:06,488
we're collecting the first samples
from another planet,

251
00:15:06,572 --> 00:15:09,033
with the intention of, one day,
bringing them back

252
00:15:09,241 --> 00:15:11,660
to our most powerful laboratories
on Earth,

253
00:15:11,869 --> 00:15:14,538
and we can analyze them
for signs of ancient life

254
00:15:14,622 --> 00:15:18,626
with instruments
that are way too big to ever fly to Mars.

255
00:15:20,628 --> 00:15:23,047
We're headed to a place
called Jezero Crater.

256
00:15:23,714 --> 00:15:26,216
The big signpost is the delta.

257
00:15:26,717 --> 00:15:28,427
Up in the northwest corner,

258
00:15:28,510 --> 00:15:30,930
we see this beautiful fan-shaped feature,

259
00:15:31,013 --> 00:15:34,224
and a delta really only forms on Earth

260
00:15:34,475 --> 00:15:38,395
where you get a river flowing
into a standing body of water.

261
00:15:39,480 --> 00:15:43,067
That tells us very clearly
that three some billion years ago,

262
00:15:43,192 --> 00:15:45,653
there was a lake in Jezero Crater.

263
00:15:45,736 --> 00:15:50,491
A great place for life to survive
and thrive, if it ever emerged on Mars.

264
00:15:52,242 --> 00:15:57,039
We know exactly where we're going now.
And it's an incredibly exciting time.

265
00:15:58,540 --> 00:16:00,417
NARRATOR: A lot of 2020 scientists,

266
00:16:00,542 --> 00:16:03,462
like Ken Williford,
trained as field geologists,

267
00:16:03,754 --> 00:16:06,590
exploring landscapes
and unraveling stories

268
00:16:06,674 --> 00:16:08,425
rocks can tell about the past.

269
00:16:09,510 --> 00:16:12,680
With a rover on Mars, though,
they'll have to work from home.

270
00:16:16,809 --> 00:16:19,061
They've been practicing
remote geology.

271
00:16:19,687 --> 00:16:22,606
One team out in the desert,
playing the rover on Mars.

272
00:16:22,815 --> 00:16:24,024
And we got all these cables here.

273
00:16:24,108 --> 00:16:25,859
NARRATOR: Pointing cameras
at rock formations,

274
00:16:25,985 --> 00:16:28,195
and streaming the images back to JPL.

275
00:16:29,488 --> 00:16:31,490
Another team at JPL,

276
00:16:31,949 --> 00:16:34,201
practicing how they'll interpret images
from Mars,

277
00:16:34,284 --> 00:16:36,453
and make decisions about what to do next.

278
00:16:38,580 --> 00:16:41,583
Then, they visit the site to see
what it looks like in person.

279
00:16:42,960 --> 00:16:44,753
KATIE: Everyone was looking
at the images on their computer,

280
00:16:44,878 --> 00:16:48,424
looking at the data, you know,
very remotely, just like we do on Mars.

281
00:16:48,549 --> 00:16:50,509
But it's really a different kind
of experience

282
00:16:50,592 --> 00:16:52,177
when you can come out here as a person,

283
00:16:52,386 --> 00:16:54,430
and look at the rocks yourself
with your own eyes,

284
00:16:54,805 --> 00:16:58,392
and point the instrument at the outcrop,
and get that data back real time.

285
00:16:58,851 --> 00:17:00,019
And I think it just gives people

286
00:17:00,102 --> 00:17:03,522
a new perspective on the observations
that come down from a rover.

287
00:17:04,606 --> 00:17:07,609
It reminds you that when you are looking
at the images that are on Mars,

288
00:17:07,693 --> 00:17:09,194
there's a whole field site there.

289
00:17:09,278 --> 00:17:10,529
So, that's why it...

290
00:17:15,826 --> 00:17:17,536
NARRATOR: They have to travel
a bit farther

291
00:17:17,619 --> 00:17:20,122
to see what the jackpot on Mars
might look like.

292
00:17:23,500 --> 00:17:25,711
KEN: The key reason we came
to this locality

293
00:17:25,794 --> 00:17:28,672
in the middle of the outback
is rocks like this.

294
00:17:28,797 --> 00:17:30,758
Rocks like this are extremely rare.

295
00:17:31,633 --> 00:17:33,594
What's very special about them
is they have evidence

296
00:17:33,677 --> 00:17:36,096
of the earliest life on Earth.

297
00:17:36,263 --> 00:17:39,808
And they tell us
what we should be looking for on Mars.

298
00:17:41,060 --> 00:17:44,146
WILLIFORD: When we say with Mars 2020,
we're seeking the signs

299
00:17:44,271 --> 00:17:45,564
of ancient life on Mars,

300
00:17:46,190 --> 00:17:50,194
this is precisely the kinds of signs
of life that we'll be seeking.

301
00:17:50,736 --> 00:17:54,156
These wrinkly layered structures
that we call stromatolites,

302
00:17:54,323 --> 00:17:58,077
which represent, basically,
fossilized pond scum, in a sense.

303
00:17:59,078 --> 00:18:01,705
This is what we would call
a bio-signature.

304
00:18:01,830 --> 00:18:04,583
Sign of life, observable to the naked eye,

305
00:18:04,708 --> 00:18:08,087
and therefore, observable to say,
the mast-mounted cameras on a rover.

306
00:18:08,629 --> 00:18:11,548
If we see something like this
on Mars, it is a very, very good day.

307
00:18:11,632 --> 00:18:13,967
It would be
a very important scientific discovery.

308
00:18:14,093 --> 00:18:17,513
We would characterize it using
the instruments that are on the rover.

309
00:18:17,763 --> 00:18:21,141
And then we would sample it,
and prepare it for return to Earth.

310
00:18:24,853 --> 00:18:27,272
NARRATOR: Now it's up to the engineers
to make it happen,

311
00:18:27,815 --> 00:18:29,733
starting with Jezero Crater.

312
00:18:30,109 --> 00:18:33,320
The most dangerous place
they've ever attempted to land on Mars.

313
00:18:34,655 --> 00:18:36,156
AL: Landing on Mars
is always very difficult.

314
00:18:36,615 --> 00:18:39,034
I mean, the vehicle has to do
everything on its own, right?

315
00:18:39,118 --> 00:18:42,329
We have no ability to joystick
the spacecraft as it's coming in.

316
00:18:43,122 --> 00:18:45,249
But at Jezero Crater,
I see a lot of dangers

317
00:18:45,332 --> 00:18:48,085
that we have to deal with.
There are rock fields to the east.

318
00:18:48,752 --> 00:18:50,838
We need to avoid steep slopes as well.

319
00:18:51,255 --> 00:18:54,133
There's a 60 to 80-meter cliff
that we definitely don't want to land on.

320
00:18:54,216 --> 00:18:55,634
That would definitely be a bad day.

321
00:18:55,843 --> 00:18:57,052
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

322
00:18:57,136 --> 00:19:00,222
NARRATOR: To improve the odds,
they're developing a new camera system

323
00:19:00,347 --> 00:19:03,475
to help the lander detect
and avoid hazards on its own.

324
00:19:05,561 --> 00:19:08,480
(BLADES WHIRRING)

325
00:19:13,902 --> 00:19:15,779
AL: We're deep into the second week
of testing.

326
00:19:15,904 --> 00:19:19,616
This critical piece of new technology,
for helping us land safely at Jezero.

327
00:19:20,367 --> 00:19:23,287
This gives the vehicle the ability
to figure out where it is,

328
00:19:23,370 --> 00:19:26,248
using a camera to take pictures
on the way down,

329
00:19:26,373 --> 00:19:28,917
and to compare the pictures to pictures
we've taken from orbiters,

330
00:19:29,042 --> 00:19:30,752
kind of a map of the place
we're trying to go.

331
00:19:30,836 --> 00:19:33,255
And then, we can use our engines
to steer the vehicle

332
00:19:33,380 --> 00:19:34,923
to safe spots that we can reach,

333
00:19:35,048 --> 00:19:36,550
because we know where we are finally.

334
00:19:36,842 --> 00:19:38,886
Everything still has to go right
for us to make it.

335
00:19:39,928 --> 00:19:42,097
You know, it's my job to be nervous
about everything.

336
00:19:42,264 --> 00:19:44,474
But, you know,
what we've been doing this week

337
00:19:44,558 --> 00:19:46,018
has given me a lot of confidence.

338
00:19:49,146 --> 00:19:51,565
NARRATOR: Landing on Mars
is never a sure thing.

339
00:19:51,982 --> 00:19:56,278
But it has been accomplished before
by some of these same JPL engineers.

340
00:19:58,155 --> 00:20:00,365
And apart from the new hazard
avoidance system,

341
00:20:00,616 --> 00:20:03,952
the descent stage is pretty much the same
as it was for curiosity,

342
00:20:04,203 --> 00:20:06,663
built by many of these same techs.

343
00:20:09,416 --> 00:20:11,460
The biggest risks on any mission

344
00:20:11,543 --> 00:20:14,213
are the things
that have never been done before.

345
00:20:15,005 --> 00:20:19,218
We want to bring samples
from Mars back to Earth.

346
00:20:20,302 --> 00:20:23,430
It takes three missions
to make that happen.

347
00:20:23,805 --> 00:20:26,975
One mission,
to core into the rocks of Mars,

348
00:20:27,059 --> 00:20:32,773
take core samples,
seal them in inhumanly clean vessels,

349
00:20:33,106 --> 00:20:35,651
and leave those vessels
on the surface of Mars.

350
00:20:36,068 --> 00:20:39,196
The second mission,
to take those sealed samples,

351
00:20:39,279 --> 00:20:42,449
put them in a small rocket,
and put them in orbit around Mars.

352
00:20:45,494 --> 00:20:48,205
The third mission,
to scoop them out of orbit,

353
00:20:48,288 --> 00:20:49,748
and bring them back to Earth.

354
00:20:50,832 --> 00:20:53,877
And our mission, Mars 2020,
is the first of those missions.

355
00:20:54,920 --> 00:21:00,259
I think that almost everybody
on this project shares my personal anxiety

356
00:21:00,425 --> 00:21:02,427
that it's that sampling system

357
00:21:02,678 --> 00:21:06,765
that is our greatest challenge
on this mission.

358
00:21:11,812 --> 00:21:13,772
I'm the Chief Engineer for the project.

359
00:21:14,314 --> 00:21:17,150
And I try to be able to span the range

360
00:21:17,276 --> 00:21:19,486
of all the different elements
of the spacecraft,

361
00:21:19,611 --> 00:21:24,324
and then find the holes
in our defense against mistakes

362
00:21:24,449 --> 00:21:26,410
and our defense against risk.

363
00:21:27,536 --> 00:21:31,915
Prior to having this job,
I developed the sampling system.

364
00:21:32,833 --> 00:21:36,712
This incredibly challenging
set of mechanisms that we use

365
00:21:36,962 --> 00:21:40,382
to core rocky samples,
and keep them clean,

366
00:21:40,465 --> 00:21:43,844
and move them through,
and process them, and collect them.

367
00:21:45,762 --> 00:21:52,436
We have a sample tube...
that sits inside this drill.

368
00:21:53,061 --> 00:21:55,314
The drill bit's put into a corer,

369
00:21:55,689 --> 00:21:58,400
and the corer goes...
(MIMICS DRILL WHIRRING)

370
00:21:59,109 --> 00:22:00,736
And as it does that,

371
00:22:00,819 --> 00:22:05,073
it shoves that column of rock
into the sample tube.

372
00:22:06,074 --> 00:22:09,244
We then, bring the sample tube out.

373
00:22:09,411 --> 00:22:11,496
We're doing this
with the sample handling arm

374
00:22:11,705 --> 00:22:13,498
on the inside of the spacecraft.

375
00:22:15,042 --> 00:22:19,713
And we move that tube...
to a station that assesses the volume,

376
00:22:19,796 --> 00:22:21,465
to a station that takes images.

377
00:22:21,631 --> 00:22:23,842
We put a seal on it...

378
00:22:25,010 --> 00:22:27,471
and then,
we put that tube back in storage.

379
00:22:28,055 --> 00:22:30,932
I got 43 of these tubes inside
the spacecraft.

380
00:22:31,016 --> 00:22:32,684
We can do that 43 times.

381
00:22:34,811 --> 00:22:38,190
A rocky core...
this is what it's all about.

382
00:22:38,482 --> 00:22:40,359
We want to bring a sample like this.

383
00:22:40,859 --> 00:22:45,822
We want to bring 30 samples like this
back from Mars.

384
00:22:47,574 --> 00:22:48,992
And so, we're putting our system together,

385
00:22:49,076 --> 00:22:51,453
this behemothly complicated thing.

386
00:22:52,287 --> 00:22:56,792
It outstrips the complexity of anything
that's been created by humans,

387
00:22:56,875 --> 00:22:58,668
and put into space, ever.

388
00:23:00,337 --> 00:23:01,588
KELLY:
This equipment is not going to Mars.

389
00:23:01,713 --> 00:23:04,174
This is our engineering model,
so it's built to be

390
00:23:04,257 --> 00:23:05,717
as flight-like as possible,

391
00:23:05,926 --> 00:23:07,469
with the same functionality
as everything in Mars.

392
00:23:08,678 --> 00:23:10,389
So,
we're in a very dirty environment here,

393
00:23:10,472 --> 00:23:13,558
and we're gonna drill rocks with it,
we're going to cover it in dust,

394
00:23:13,642 --> 00:23:16,144
and really run it through its paces,
and wear it out.

395
00:23:16,311 --> 00:23:18,021
That a pretty good-looking core.

396
00:23:18,438 --> 00:23:20,690
NARRATOR: This dirty testing version
of the hardware

397
00:23:20,774 --> 00:23:23,068
will take a beating
over the next few years.

398
00:23:23,318 --> 00:23:25,737
Eventually moving
to a space simulation chamber

399
00:23:25,821 --> 00:23:29,658
to prove it can function in the frigid,
low pressure environment of Mars.

400
00:23:36,164 --> 00:23:39,376
Two flight versions,
one of which will actually go to Mars,

401
00:23:39,584 --> 00:23:42,629
are still being built at this point,
under very different conditions.

402
00:23:43,839 --> 00:23:47,509
WILLIFORD: One of our key concerns
with Mars 2020 is keeping it clean.

403
00:23:48,009 --> 00:23:52,222
So, we're going to Mars,
we're spending a lot of resources

404
00:23:52,347 --> 00:23:53,682
to collect these samples.

405
00:23:53,890 --> 00:23:56,685
We don't wanna be analyzing bits of Earth.

406
00:23:58,478 --> 00:24:01,189
NARRATOR: On a good day,
the air outside JPL,

407
00:24:01,314 --> 00:24:04,526
just north of Los Angeles,
is a soup of hydrocarbons,

408
00:24:04,609 --> 00:24:08,071
and millions of microscopic particles
in every cubic foot of air.

409
00:24:09,072 --> 00:24:11,950
On a bad day, it can be
in the hundreds of millions.

410
00:24:14,828 --> 00:24:17,122
The spacecraft clean room is filtered
to no more

411
00:24:17,247 --> 00:24:20,625
than 10,000 microscopic particles
per cubic foot.

412
00:24:22,043 --> 00:24:24,588
The ultraclean rooms,
where the flight sampling hardware

413
00:24:24,671 --> 00:24:27,674
is built, have no more
than one hundred per cubic foot.

414
00:24:29,676 --> 00:24:33,305
LACK: About two and a half years ago,
they came to me and said,

415
00:24:33,972 --> 00:24:36,475
"We need to set up
some clean rooms that could handle

416
00:24:36,558 --> 00:24:37,934
"this cleanliness level.

417
00:24:38,101 --> 00:24:40,562
"It's something that we've never done
here at JPL before,

418
00:24:40,687 --> 00:24:42,230
"and we don't know how to do it."

419
00:24:43,732 --> 00:24:46,193
Everything inside the clean room
had to be brand new,

420
00:24:46,318 --> 00:24:51,198
which means brand-new flow wrenches,
brand new toolboxes, with brand-new tools.

421
00:24:51,740 --> 00:24:54,951
All the computer systems
are brand new. Everything.

422
00:24:55,076 --> 00:24:58,497
Right out of the box,
and born into the clean room.

423
00:24:58,872 --> 00:25:01,875
It took a year for me
to get them up and running.

424
00:25:02,209 --> 00:25:06,421
No... no joke. It took a year.
(CHUCKLES) It was... it was crazy.

425
00:25:07,547 --> 00:25:10,133
ADAM: The technicians
have been part of the team

426
00:25:10,217 --> 00:25:13,470
from the get-go,
sort of, authored this approach,

427
00:25:14,012 --> 00:25:16,348
and verified that we could
actually pull it off.

428
00:25:17,641 --> 00:25:20,143
NARRATOR: The rules
for the ultraclean rooms go way beyond

429
00:25:20,227 --> 00:25:23,063
what's required in any other cleanrooms
at JPL.

430
00:25:25,065 --> 00:25:28,109
They start with the same gloves, masks,
and bunny suits.

431
00:25:29,236 --> 00:25:31,571
There's the same air shower on the way in.

432
00:25:32,781 --> 00:25:35,867
But in these ultraclean rooms,
that's just the beginning.

433
00:25:37,619 --> 00:25:40,205
BRIANNA: I work with the bits
and corer team,

434
00:25:40,372 --> 00:25:43,250
and these needs to capture
what's coming from Mars,

435
00:25:43,333 --> 00:25:44,626
not what's coming from Earth.

436
00:25:44,709 --> 00:25:47,337
So, we have to take
extraordinary measures.

437
00:25:48,046 --> 00:25:50,799
JIM: I've got technicians
over in the ultraclean rooms

438
00:25:50,924 --> 00:25:54,719
that are wearing
double bunny suits, double gloves.

439
00:25:55,428 --> 00:25:57,097
JENNA: Anything that can produce
a particle

440
00:25:57,180 --> 00:26:00,183
that can cause contamination
is not allowed.

441
00:26:00,892 --> 00:26:03,228
No scented shampoo or conditioner,
no perfume,

442
00:26:03,311 --> 00:26:05,814
no cologne, no makeup,
things like that.

443
00:26:06,815 --> 00:26:09,276
BRIANNA: The rule is,
if we smell you before you go in,

444
00:26:09,401 --> 00:26:11,152
you... you can't come in.

445
00:26:11,528 --> 00:26:14,406
You can't smoke.
Oh, few people needed to quit that.

446
00:26:15,198 --> 00:26:18,368
SETH: Yeah, it kind of became
like JPL urban mythology

447
00:26:18,451 --> 00:26:21,246
double bunny suiting
and all stainless steel tools.

448
00:26:21,371 --> 00:26:23,540
You'd hear these incredible
things they were doing,

449
00:26:23,623 --> 00:26:25,584
kind of on the bleeding edge
of technology.

450
00:26:26,710 --> 00:26:30,422
JAMES: We rarely see them.
They're almost the ghosts of lab.

451
00:26:31,006 --> 00:26:32,924
I honestly don't even know what to expect.

452
00:26:36,219 --> 00:26:38,930
(RATTLING)

453
00:26:39,598 --> 00:26:42,392
THORA: We are working on something
that is the cleanest

454
00:26:42,475 --> 00:26:44,978
we've ever really attempted
to send into space.

455
00:26:45,729 --> 00:26:46,938
So, we've had to rethink,

456
00:26:47,105 --> 00:26:51,318
how do we do this as cleanly as possible,
and keep all those particles off the rest

457
00:26:51,401 --> 00:26:52,861
of the surface of the flight hardware?

458
00:26:54,154 --> 00:26:56,781
NARRATOR: Cleanest of all
are the titanium sample tubes

459
00:26:56,948 --> 00:27:00,035
that will preserve Martian rock cores
from the moment they're drilled

460
00:27:00,118 --> 00:27:01,578
until they return to Earth.

461
00:27:03,538 --> 00:27:07,584
By the time they go to Mars,
they'll be the cleanest things ever made.

462
00:27:08,710 --> 00:27:10,962
That is not hyperbole.

463
00:27:11,713 --> 00:27:14,341
Literally, cleaner than anything
humans have ever made.

464
00:27:15,717 --> 00:27:18,970
NARRATOR: Even gloved hands
can't touch the tubes during cleaning.

465
00:27:19,387 --> 00:27:23,058
In hands-free cages, they'll go through
a barrage of chemical solvents.

466
00:27:25,977 --> 00:27:28,688
They've been through
a complex manufacturing process.

467
00:27:29,064 --> 00:27:34,402
Machining, polishing, special coatings,
often sterilized between steps.

468
00:27:36,196 --> 00:27:39,282
And now, before they go
to the techs for mechanical assembly,

469
00:27:39,449 --> 00:27:40,867
they're cleaned again.

470
00:27:42,202 --> 00:27:46,247
Multiple soaks in solvent tanks agitated
with high frequency sound,

471
00:27:46,373 --> 00:27:48,833
strip away more particles and organics.

472
00:27:50,168 --> 00:27:52,629
THORA: No particle's thicker
than a strand of hair.

473
00:27:53,088 --> 00:27:55,507
A fingerprint can weigh
around 50 micrograms.

474
00:27:55,632 --> 00:27:58,218
We are trying
to hit less than point one micrograms

475
00:27:58,343 --> 00:27:59,636
for organic contaminations.

476
00:28:01,179 --> 00:28:03,765
NARRATOR: Then, they get baked
in a high temperature oven

477
00:28:03,848 --> 00:28:05,392
to burn off whatever is left.

478
00:28:08,269 --> 00:28:10,480
They're building 200 of these tubes.

479
00:28:10,939 --> 00:28:14,651
In the end, 43 of the most pristine
will go to Mars.

480
00:28:16,069 --> 00:28:17,946
In the meantime,
the technicians have to add

481
00:28:18,029 --> 00:28:20,740
mechanical parts
without contaminating them.

482
00:28:22,409 --> 00:28:24,786
That happens in an even cleaner room,

483
00:28:25,203 --> 00:28:27,247
with sterile gloves, sterile smocks,

484
00:28:27,539 --> 00:28:29,833
and sterile goggles on top
of everything else.

485
00:28:31,000 --> 00:28:33,294
They call it Area 151.

486
00:28:36,005 --> 00:28:37,298
-FEMALE ENGINEER: You ready?
-MALE ENGINEER: Yeah.

487
00:28:37,382 --> 00:28:38,550
FEMALE ENGINEER: You can go in now.

488
00:28:45,181 --> 00:28:48,560
ADAM: To put all of these very,
very clean elements together,

489
00:28:48,977 --> 00:28:50,854
is a tremendous amount of handwork.

490
00:28:51,312 --> 00:28:54,399
And you have to do it in these very,
very clean environments

491
00:28:54,524 --> 00:28:57,485
using aseptic assembly protocols.

492
00:28:57,819 --> 00:28:59,362
You're not touching a lot of surfaces,

493
00:28:59,446 --> 00:29:02,282
you want your hands to be sterile,
you want your tools to be sterile.

494
00:29:02,824 --> 00:29:05,493
It's required
all of our flight technicians

495
00:29:05,577 --> 00:29:08,830
to retrain their minds
about how they build the flight hardware.

496
00:29:09,497 --> 00:29:12,208
JENNA: You have to be very,
very conscious of your hands.

497
00:29:12,584 --> 00:29:16,171
You can't rest your hands on the table,
you can't rest them on your gown.

498
00:29:18,131 --> 00:29:20,508
ADAM: It's all about the handwork.

499
00:29:21,342 --> 00:29:24,471
There's a tremendous demand
on the physical control

500
00:29:24,971 --> 00:29:28,933
of the people with touch labor
on the hardware

501
00:29:29,267 --> 00:29:31,853
to make this cleanliness all come to pass.

502
00:29:31,936 --> 00:29:34,189
They can get it right
or they can get it wrong.

503
00:29:35,356 --> 00:29:37,984
NARRATOR: Everything about this
has been more difficult,

504
00:29:38,109 --> 00:29:39,778
and taken longer than expected.

505
00:29:41,029 --> 00:29:43,114
ADAM: One thing that we didn't appreciate

506
00:29:43,698 --> 00:29:47,452
was that there were enough piece parts,
enough special things,

507
00:29:47,577 --> 00:29:50,330
special surface treatments,
special processes...

508
00:29:51,372 --> 00:29:53,750
that we have slipped our schedule.

509
00:29:55,126 --> 00:30:00,173
We really wanted to be in the position
that we're in now about six months ago.

510
00:30:01,925 --> 00:30:04,969
So, the sampling system
is what wakes me up

511
00:30:05,053 --> 00:30:06,888
in the middle of the night
most frequently.

512
00:30:15,188 --> 00:30:17,607
NARRATOR:
"Up the hill," as they say, at JPL,

513
00:30:17,857 --> 00:30:23,446
is a legendary spacecraft torture chamber
called the 25-foot Space Simulator.

514
00:30:26,574 --> 00:30:30,537
This relic from the early 1960s,
declared a National Historic Landmark,

515
00:30:30,703 --> 00:30:33,039
is still the state of the art
for recreating

516
00:30:33,122 --> 00:30:35,375
the punishing environments
of space on Earth.

517
00:30:38,628 --> 00:30:40,839
THEODORE: After the whole spacecraft's
been assembled,

518
00:30:41,005 --> 00:30:44,384
we'll roll it through the high bay here,
and load it into the chamber.

519
00:30:44,968 --> 00:30:47,762
The primary function of this
is to simulate space

520
00:30:47,971 --> 00:30:50,014
as the spacecraft is actually flying.

521
00:30:50,598 --> 00:30:53,977
It simulates the extreme cold of space
and the extreme hot

522
00:30:54,269 --> 00:30:55,728
from the Sun to the shade,

523
00:30:55,895 --> 00:30:58,690
as well as the high vacuum,
the lack of pressure.

524
00:30:59,440 --> 00:31:00,859
We're gonna light up D-5.

525
00:31:01,025 --> 00:31:02,402
MALE VOICE: (OVER RADIO)
Copy that. D-5.

526
00:31:02,735 --> 00:31:05,822
THEODORE: The walls and the floor
of the chamber

527
00:31:05,905 --> 00:31:10,702
are flooded with liquid nitrogen,
which cools it to about negative 180 C.

528
00:31:11,661 --> 00:31:14,998
NARRATOR:
That's 292 below zero Fahrenheit.

529
00:31:15,915 --> 00:31:18,251
THEODORE: We can then use
the solar simulator

530
00:31:18,501 --> 00:31:20,795
to heat up the top of the spacecraft.

531
00:31:21,087 --> 00:31:23,590
The light that you see here
is actually coming

532
00:31:23,673 --> 00:31:26,968
from a Xenon arc lamp
that's two floors down,

533
00:31:27,677 --> 00:31:31,514
shining up through a lens assembly
on the second floor.

534
00:31:32,015 --> 00:31:34,767
Right now, we have one arc lamp running.

535
00:31:34,893 --> 00:31:36,769
We'll run about 18 lamps

536
00:31:37,270 --> 00:31:39,689
during the actual hot case
for the spacecraft.

537
00:31:41,107 --> 00:31:44,527
NARRATOR: The hot case
can reach 212 degrees above zero

538
00:31:44,611 --> 00:31:46,613
on the sunny side of the spacecraft.

539
00:31:47,030 --> 00:31:48,531
(CHAIN RATTLING)

540
00:31:50,241 --> 00:31:52,827
NARRATOR: Exploring this building
is a bit like going back

541
00:31:52,911 --> 00:31:55,121
in time to the beginning of the space age.

542
00:31:56,289 --> 00:31:59,709
The Mariner 2 Venus Probe,
NASA's first spacecraft

543
00:31:59,792 --> 00:32:03,504
to visit another planet,
was tested here in 1962,

544
00:32:03,796 --> 00:32:07,425
followed by just about
every interplanetary traveler since then.

545
00:32:11,930 --> 00:32:13,556
So, this is the end bell of the chamber.

546
00:32:13,640 --> 00:32:15,558
This is the bottom
of the pressure vessel.

547
00:32:15,850 --> 00:32:17,310
This is where the vacuum's held.

548
00:32:17,602 --> 00:32:20,563
Most of the electronics for the spacecraft
are passed through these ports.

549
00:32:20,813 --> 00:32:23,650
(MACHINE WHIRRING)

550
00:32:28,196 --> 00:32:30,865
This is a 32-kilowatt arc lamp.

551
00:32:31,449 --> 00:32:33,743
Right now,
it's running about 20 kilowatts.

552
00:32:34,118 --> 00:32:35,119
This is just one.

553
00:32:35,203 --> 00:32:39,248
We would usually use 18 of them
for our warm case on the spacecraft.

554
00:32:43,461 --> 00:32:45,964
NARRATOR: The 2020 spacecraft,
minus the rover,

555
00:32:46,089 --> 00:32:49,550
is now in the chamber
for its first major system test.

556
00:32:52,470 --> 00:32:56,891
Over the next 12 days, it will experience
most of the extreme deep space conditions

557
00:32:56,975 --> 00:32:59,102
it has to survive on the way to Mars.

558
00:33:02,438 --> 00:33:05,566
The simulator can also replicate
the thin, dry atmosphere

559
00:33:05,650 --> 00:33:08,444
and wide temperature swings
on the surface of Mars.

560
00:33:13,241 --> 00:33:16,995
This is where the ingenuity helicopter
proved it could both fly and control

561
00:33:17,078 --> 00:33:18,746
itself in that environment.

562
00:33:19,789 --> 00:33:22,291
(BLADES WHIRRING)

563
00:33:23,710 --> 00:33:26,379
NARRATOR: It had to be very light,
just under four pounds.

564
00:33:26,796 --> 00:33:30,299
But powerful enough to spin
the rotors at 2,400 RPM

565
00:33:30,466 --> 00:33:32,969
to generate lift
in an atmosphere less than one percent

566
00:33:33,094 --> 00:33:34,512
as dense as Earth.

567
00:33:36,848 --> 00:33:38,725
(BLADES WHIRRING)

568
00:33:39,684 --> 00:33:41,019
(CROWD CHEERING, APPLAUDING)

569
00:33:42,437 --> 00:33:44,647
MIMI: It was an amazing feeling.

570
00:33:44,856 --> 00:33:49,360
We've been working
for four and a half, almost five years.

571
00:33:49,777 --> 00:33:51,112
It's a huge milestone for us.

572
00:33:52,947 --> 00:33:54,032
NARRATOR:
It will travel to Mars

573
00:33:54,115 --> 00:33:57,827
attached to the bottom of the rover
and drop free when it's time to fly.

574
00:33:59,120 --> 00:34:02,582
(BLADES WHIRRING)

575
00:34:02,665 --> 00:34:04,500
NARRATOR: It will only fly a few times.

576
00:34:05,460 --> 00:34:08,963
The goal is to prove itself
as a technology for future missions.

577
00:34:10,590 --> 00:34:13,885
MIMI: We'll be able to get
high definition images

578
00:34:14,135 --> 00:34:17,388
of places that we want to send rovers to.

579
00:34:17,889 --> 00:34:21,642
So, we'll have a scout to inform
before long traverses,

580
00:34:22,101 --> 00:34:25,688
and then we'll be able
to have a totally new way

581
00:34:25,772 --> 00:34:28,399
to get to places
we simply cannot get to, today.

582
00:34:28,691 --> 00:34:32,153
And to be able to sit here and say,
"Yes, it's working,"

583
00:34:32,236 --> 00:34:34,030
is a huge deal. It's a huge deal.

584
00:34:35,114 --> 00:34:39,494
But, there's always gonna be a "but"
until we do it at Mars.

585
00:34:42,121 --> 00:34:43,706
NARRATOR: Of course,
not everything can be tested

586
00:34:43,790 --> 00:34:44,916
in the simulator.

587
00:34:46,209 --> 00:34:48,169
To test the parachute
under Mars conditions,

588
00:34:48,586 --> 00:34:50,421
they had to launch a supersonic rocket

589
00:34:50,546 --> 00:34:53,049
and deploy the chute
one hundred thousand feet up,

590
00:34:53,299 --> 00:34:56,719
where the atmosphere on Earth
is as thin as Mars near the surface.

591
00:35:00,556 --> 00:35:03,810
But even that doesn't tell them
everything they need to know.

592
00:35:05,019 --> 00:35:07,355
IAN: In order to get that parachute
out behind the vehicle,

593
00:35:07,438 --> 00:35:10,024
we have to shoot it out of a cannon,
called a mortar,

594
00:35:10,149 --> 00:35:11,859
at about a hundred miles an hour.

595
00:35:12,235 --> 00:35:15,655
So, we're out here getting ready
to do a test of that cannon.

596
00:35:17,073 --> 00:35:19,534
We've got lots and lots
of high-speed imagery,

597
00:35:19,617 --> 00:35:22,078
recording it up
to 20,000 frames per second

598
00:35:22,203 --> 00:35:24,914
because we're witnessing and monitoring
and watching things

599
00:35:24,997 --> 00:35:27,959
that are occurring in microseconds
or at least milliseconds.

600
00:35:28,626 --> 00:35:32,463
We've got a parachute pack that's loaded
into this canister behind me.

601
00:35:33,506 --> 00:35:35,133
This is the 14th test.

602
00:35:35,299 --> 00:35:37,844
There are a number of small changes
that we've made along the way.

603
00:35:37,927 --> 00:35:40,805
This is hopefully the final test
to see that all those changes worked.

604
00:35:41,639 --> 00:35:42,849
It's a pretty exciting test.

605
00:35:43,057 --> 00:35:46,018
That's about two hundred feet high
that this thing has to travel

606
00:35:46,269 --> 00:35:48,354
in an, you know, a fraction of a second.

607
00:35:48,521 --> 00:35:52,817
And when this goes off it's a...
it's a pretty spectacular boom. (CHUCKLES)

608
00:35:53,276 --> 00:35:54,527
-(GASPS)
-Whoa!

609
00:35:58,990 --> 00:36:01,367
IAN: It's 108 grams of black powder.

610
00:36:04,787 --> 00:36:06,873
You know, we study, we analyze,
we predict,

611
00:36:06,998 --> 00:36:08,749
we model all of these behaviors,

612
00:36:08,958 --> 00:36:11,043
but it's not till we actually do
a test like this

613
00:36:11,127 --> 00:36:13,045
that we get to see if it works
the way that we need it to.

614
00:36:15,047 --> 00:36:16,924
NARRATOR: That's true
of pretty much every element

615
00:36:17,008 --> 00:36:18,050
of the spacecraft.

616
00:36:19,969 --> 00:36:21,804
A near twin of the flight rover,

617
00:36:21,888 --> 00:36:25,308
designed for hard testing,
is spun up to 18 Gs

618
00:36:25,391 --> 00:36:28,895
on a centrifuge to simulate
the crushing gravitational stress

619
00:36:28,978 --> 00:36:30,354
of launch and landing.

620
00:36:32,273 --> 00:36:34,859
That's about six times more
than astronauts experience

621
00:36:34,942 --> 00:36:36,360
on launch from Earth.

622
00:36:39,405 --> 00:36:43,117
The wheels and suspension have to survive
the shock of landing.

623
00:36:43,451 --> 00:36:45,453
(CLANKS)

624
00:36:45,870 --> 00:36:50,875
(RATTLES)

625
00:36:53,127 --> 00:36:56,339
NARRATOR: And then endless hours
of driving in the Mars Yard,

626
00:36:56,464 --> 00:36:59,008
using a stripped-down
rover to approximate its weight

627
00:36:59,091 --> 00:37:00,218
in Mars gravity.

628
00:37:03,012 --> 00:37:06,641
The Perseverance wheels are more rugged
than the ones on the Curiosity rover,

629
00:37:07,099 --> 00:37:10,228
which took an unexpected beating
in the early days after landing.

630
00:37:12,772 --> 00:37:14,273
When the problem first appeared,

631
00:37:14,357 --> 00:37:18,361
they built a test track in the Mars Yard
to get an idea of how much longer

632
00:37:18,486 --> 00:37:20,529
Curiosity's wheels might last.

633
00:37:22,573 --> 00:37:24,909
Helping to build that track
was James Bailey's

634
00:37:24,992 --> 00:37:28,371
introduction to the elite world
of spacecraft development.

635
00:37:29,914 --> 00:37:31,916
I went up to what is known
as the Mars Yard,

636
00:37:31,999 --> 00:37:34,043
and I was handed
a 20-pound sledgehammer

637
00:37:34,168 --> 00:37:36,963
and a bucket of rocks, and they said,
"You're gonna break some rocks."

638
00:37:37,588 --> 00:37:41,384
(CLANKS)

639
00:37:41,968 --> 00:37:44,428
JAMES: My first couple months here
at JPL learning about spacecraft

640
00:37:44,845 --> 00:37:47,640
and the Mars mission.
This is my first dose of it.

641
00:37:48,057 --> 00:37:51,894
And coming from the army,
yeah, it was the easiest money I ever got.

642
00:37:52,561 --> 00:37:54,730
So, this is my beginning at JPL.

643
00:37:56,816 --> 00:38:00,778
NARRATOR: The Mars Yard rock pile
can test the attitude of new flight techs.

644
00:38:01,737 --> 00:38:04,323
Those who pass,
move on to work where the stakes

645
00:38:04,448 --> 00:38:07,118
and the expectations are much higher.

646
00:38:12,790 --> 00:38:15,167
The team building
the rover's mobility system,

647
00:38:15,418 --> 00:38:18,879
wheels and suspension,
has been at it for three and a half years.

648
00:38:19,714 --> 00:38:22,842
In a little over a month,
they'll deliver it to the flight rover.

649
00:38:25,052 --> 00:38:29,974
Today, they're drilling holes
through the titanium suspension, by hand.

650
00:38:33,352 --> 00:38:35,146
PATRICK: They've got about 30 plus

651
00:38:35,479 --> 00:38:37,982
high precision holes
that they're drilling.

652
00:38:38,566 --> 00:38:42,069
It's titanium, so it's very difficult
to drill on its own.

653
00:38:42,236 --> 00:38:44,322
But then, irrespective of the material,

654
00:38:44,405 --> 00:38:46,699
it's still difficult to hit
the kinda size tolerances

655
00:38:46,782 --> 00:38:48,951
that we're after.
We're talking ten thousandths of an inch.

656
00:38:49,910 --> 00:38:52,955
But we don't get to mount our suspension
to a drill press

657
00:38:53,039 --> 00:38:54,957
or to a mill to make these holes.

658
00:38:55,750 --> 00:38:58,294
PASAN: Everything has a feel to it,

659
00:38:58,377 --> 00:39:01,881
whether it's the drill speed,
the temperature of the material.

660
00:39:03,049 --> 00:39:06,385
You're communicating with the hardware.
All the techs have that sense.

661
00:39:07,595 --> 00:39:10,222
PATRICK: I think some of the engineers
at the beginning of this would have said,

662
00:39:10,306 --> 00:39:12,350
"You can't achieve this kinda precision
by hand.

663
00:39:12,433 --> 00:39:16,062
"Starting from a really small hole,
making it a little bigger each time."

664
00:39:16,145 --> 00:39:19,231
But now we can hit hole after hole
to that level of precision.

665
00:39:25,404 --> 00:39:27,990
NARRATOR: A few days later,
they're installing the electric drive

666
00:39:28,115 --> 00:39:30,242
and steering motors
into the suspension struts

667
00:39:30,326 --> 00:39:31,952
where they'll be mounting the wheels.

668
00:39:37,041 --> 00:39:39,794
It's some of the most critical hardware
on the rover

669
00:39:39,877 --> 00:39:42,296
and some of the trickiest to handle.

670
00:39:43,798 --> 00:39:47,551
These actuators have to be rugged enough
to work for years on Mars,

671
00:39:47,676 --> 00:39:51,389
at temperatures that can swing
100 degrees in a single day.

672
00:39:52,640 --> 00:39:55,267
But they're vulnerable in human hands.

673
00:39:58,562 --> 00:40:00,231
The rover has ten of them.

674
00:40:00,689 --> 00:40:04,860
It took years to build and perfect 12,
giving them two spares.

675
00:40:05,152 --> 00:40:08,656
That makes them worth
about one million dollars apiece.

676
00:40:10,741 --> 00:40:16,831
PASAN: It's definitely a moment
where you need to be extremely focused.

677
00:40:17,248 --> 00:40:18,624
There's no room for error.

678
00:40:18,874 --> 00:40:20,918
You kind of have to drown
everything else out

679
00:40:21,001 --> 00:40:23,170
and at the same time, not be afraid.

680
00:40:25,256 --> 00:40:27,758
PATRICK: You know, we're at a phase now
where the stakes are really high,

681
00:40:27,883 --> 00:40:31,429
and it's not so much
about, like, monetary value of something.

682
00:40:31,512 --> 00:40:34,723
It's really about irrecoverable schedule
at this point.

683
00:40:35,641 --> 00:40:38,602
We're looking at years and years
of another team's work,

684
00:40:38,811 --> 00:40:40,771
and now it's our responsibility

685
00:40:40,855 --> 00:40:43,399
to see it safely
on to its next destination.

686
00:40:47,862 --> 00:40:49,530
NARRATOR: The electrical cabling harness,

687
00:40:49,905 --> 00:40:53,242
another system representing
years of work by another team...

688
00:41:06,422 --> 00:41:08,382
powered up for the first time.

689
00:41:10,217 --> 00:41:11,635
Everything works.

690
00:41:12,344 --> 00:41:13,721
PATRICK: That looks pretty good.

691
00:41:14,013 --> 00:41:15,890
NARRATOR: Now, it's ready for wheels.

692
00:41:16,348 --> 00:41:19,393
(MACHINE WHIRS)

693
00:41:21,854 --> 00:41:24,106
NARRATOR: They've been in production
for more than a year.

694
00:41:27,359 --> 00:41:29,111
They have 43 altogether.

695
00:41:30,196 --> 00:41:31,947
Only six will go to Mars.

696
00:41:32,573 --> 00:41:36,452
The rest will stay behind as spares
for the test rovers in the Mars Yard.

697
00:41:39,121 --> 00:41:43,125
-(MACHINE WHIRRING)
-(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

698
00:41:43,584 --> 00:41:46,670
NARRATOR: Now, just days away
from delivery to the flight rover,

699
00:41:46,879 --> 00:41:50,007
they're in the hands of the mobility team
for the first time.

700
00:42:00,851 --> 00:42:03,229
PATRICK: This stuff looks beautiful

701
00:42:03,812 --> 00:42:06,482
because it's a product
of functional design

702
00:42:06,815 --> 00:42:09,109
kind of being taken to the nth degree.

703
00:42:10,444 --> 00:42:13,239
I find that complex designs
are usually complex

704
00:42:13,405 --> 00:42:14,657
because they haven't had enough time

705
00:42:14,740 --> 00:42:16,951
to cook and distill down
to something elegant.

706
00:42:18,285 --> 00:42:19,328
MALE TECH: Okay.

707
00:42:21,539 --> 00:42:22,873
-MALE TECH 1: Voila!
-MALE TECH 2: Ta-da!

708
00:42:32,925 --> 00:42:35,177
PATRICK: You know, it feels
really high pressure now,

709
00:42:36,428 --> 00:42:38,347
because it's not a few different
piece parts

710
00:42:38,430 --> 00:42:39,932
in different people's hands.

711
00:42:42,726 --> 00:42:44,603
You know, it's one big installation.

712
00:42:45,688 --> 00:42:48,023
So, we feel a great sense
of responsibility, I think,

713
00:42:48,274 --> 00:42:51,360
to really not mess it up
in these final stages.

714
00:42:57,449 --> 00:43:00,327
NARRATOR: A few days later,
the rover mobility system

715
00:43:00,411 --> 00:43:03,038
is leaving its birthplace in Building 18.

716
00:43:04,623 --> 00:43:06,709
It's a venerable tradition at JPL,

717
00:43:07,459 --> 00:43:10,421
the procession of finished flight hardware
down the hill

718
00:43:10,588 --> 00:43:12,756
to the Spacecraft Assembly Facility.

719
00:43:15,801 --> 00:43:18,846
This is where the people who built it
say goodbye to hardware

720
00:43:18,971 --> 00:43:21,640
they've been working on
for the past three or four years

721
00:43:21,724 --> 00:43:23,434
and hand it over to ATLO,

722
00:43:23,684 --> 00:43:26,729
the Assembly, Test,
and Launch Operations team.

723
00:43:27,229 --> 00:43:28,272
(CHUCKLES)

724
00:43:28,480 --> 00:43:34,612
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

725
00:43:35,321 --> 00:43:37,448
ADAM: It's not in the handbooks
of engineering

726
00:43:37,531 --> 00:43:38,907
at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

727
00:43:39,033 --> 00:43:42,828
You run into it when you build
your first piece of spaceflight hardware,

728
00:43:42,911 --> 00:43:43,954
and you...

729
00:43:44,872 --> 00:43:47,499
go to deliver it
to the rest of the spacecraft,

730
00:43:47,666 --> 00:43:51,795
and you watch this group grab it
and carry it away from you, you're like,

731
00:43:51,879 --> 00:43:53,797
"Whoa, whoa, whoa. Wait a second."

732
00:43:54,048 --> 00:43:55,132
"You know, I understand

733
00:43:55,215 --> 00:43:57,801
"this piece of hardware, and how do..."
You know,

734
00:43:57,885 --> 00:44:00,095
"Why do you think you understand?"
As soon as you hand it over to them,

735
00:44:00,179 --> 00:44:01,221
they're like, "Whatever, dude."

736
00:44:03,390 --> 00:44:07,853
MICHAEL: Now, ATLO owns it.
So, it's no longer their responsibility.

737
00:44:08,479 --> 00:44:09,647
Now, we control it,

738
00:44:09,772 --> 00:44:11,690
and we will be the ones
to put it on the spacecraft.

739
00:44:12,024 --> 00:44:14,485
We'll take care of this,
we'll get it inside with QA,

740
00:44:14,610 --> 00:44:16,070
and then we'll section it all off.

741
00:44:16,153 --> 00:44:17,905
-Appreciate it, sir.
-And we'll secure it for ya.

742
00:44:18,030 --> 00:44:21,617
PATRICK: It's like taking
a kid to college, I imagine. (CHUCKLES)

743
00:44:21,867 --> 00:44:26,330
(WHIRRING)

744
00:44:33,754 --> 00:44:35,589
ADAM: You deliver to ATLO...

745
00:44:36,423 --> 00:44:39,635
then it kind of becomes possessed
by this group of people.

746
00:44:40,386 --> 00:44:42,805
They take tremendous ownership

747
00:44:43,097 --> 00:44:45,557
of the elements of the spacecraft
that come into them.

748
00:44:46,392 --> 00:44:47,726
And I think that that's...

749
00:44:48,894 --> 00:44:50,979
the perfect perspective for them to have,

750
00:44:51,355 --> 00:44:54,024
because once they have those pieces
of spaceflight hardware...

751
00:44:54,858 --> 00:44:57,903
it's all in their hands.
Literally in their hands.

752
00:44:58,654 --> 00:45:03,325
If you make mistakes at that point,
they can be very, very, very costly.

753
00:45:03,742 --> 00:45:06,620
They can conceivably cost the mission.

754
00:45:09,957 --> 00:45:11,875
MALE TECH: All right. Move this up.

755
00:45:12,042 --> 00:45:14,169
NARRATOR: The stacked spacecraft
has served its time

756
00:45:14,253 --> 00:45:16,880
in the Space Simulator
with no major problems.

757
00:45:17,673 --> 00:45:19,675
From here it goes back to the clean room

758
00:45:19,758 --> 00:45:22,553
to be taken apart again
and given its final tune-up.

759
00:45:24,972 --> 00:45:27,975
From now on,
it's going to be all about the rover.

760
00:45:31,228 --> 00:45:33,731
First up, the Remote Sensing Mast.

761
00:45:35,357 --> 00:45:39,153
Essentially the rover's head,
with high resolution color cameras,

762
00:45:39,445 --> 00:45:42,364
navigation cameras,
and the SuperCam laser.

763
00:45:48,746 --> 00:45:51,123
Installations are meticulously planned,

764
00:45:51,498 --> 00:45:54,418
closely supervised, and inherently risky.

765
00:45:54,918 --> 00:45:57,463
-ENGINEER 1: Okay. Up, slow.
-ENGINEER 2: Up, slow.

766
00:45:57,963 --> 00:45:59,548
(MACHINE WHIRRING)

767
00:46:00,007 --> 00:46:02,217
ENGINEER 1: Stop. Okay.

768
00:46:02,634 --> 00:46:03,677
South, slow.

769
00:46:03,844 --> 00:46:05,012
NARRATOR: Engineers direct...

770
00:46:05,345 --> 00:46:07,264
ENGIRNEER 2: South, slow.

771
00:46:07,765 --> 00:46:10,559
...and the techs
handle the crane and flight hardware.

772
00:46:11,101 --> 00:46:12,352
ENGINEER 1: East.

773
00:46:12,436 --> 00:46:14,146
SETH: Most other places
I've worked at are just like,

774
00:46:14,229 --> 00:46:16,648
"Shut up and turn the wrench,"
but here it's very different.

775
00:46:17,191 --> 00:46:20,736
Everyone is valued for the insight
that they bring to things.

776
00:46:21,278 --> 00:46:22,279
ENGINEER 1: Slow.

777
00:46:22,946 --> 00:46:24,990
ADAM:
It's more than just having the skills.

778
00:46:25,532 --> 00:46:27,326
There's a mindset to those guys.

779
00:46:28,035 --> 00:46:29,203
-ENGINEER 1: Stop.
-ENGINEER 2: Stop.

780
00:46:29,369 --> 00:46:32,122
ADAM: The work is very demanding.
There's a lot of pressure.

781
00:46:33,290 --> 00:46:35,083
The hours, you know,
we're working two shifts.

782
00:46:35,334 --> 00:46:37,336
There'll be times
when we'll be working three shifts.

783
00:46:37,878 --> 00:46:39,630
You're working over weekends.

784
00:46:40,214 --> 00:46:42,174
SETH: Like in any work site,
when you're in the middle of it,

785
00:46:42,257 --> 00:46:44,009
you're just like, "Oh, why do I do this?"

786
00:46:44,259 --> 00:46:47,554
But everyone comes back. (CHUCKLES)
We're like the mafia.

787
00:46:47,638 --> 00:46:48,764
Everyone comes back.

788
00:46:48,931 --> 00:46:50,808
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

789
00:46:55,103 --> 00:46:56,647
MALE TECH: I must be nervous,
my sweaty hands

790
00:46:56,772 --> 00:46:58,315
won't go into these gloves.

791
00:46:58,398 --> 00:46:59,441
(MALE TECH 1 LAUGHING)

792
00:46:59,525 --> 00:47:01,860
NARRATOR: A week later,
it's time for the wheels.

793
00:47:02,277 --> 00:47:04,279
MALE TECH: I guess, by the end of the day,
both sides should be on.

794
00:47:04,696 --> 00:47:07,115
-MALE TECH 2: No pressure.
-(MALE TECH 1 LAUGHING)

795
00:47:07,366 --> 00:47:09,493
-MALE TECH: Okay, let's charge on.
-(MALE TECH 1 CHUCKLING)

796
00:47:09,576 --> 00:47:10,661
MALE TECH: It's show time!

797
00:47:21,213 --> 00:47:23,507
NARRATOR:
This will be an all-day operation

798
00:47:23,590 --> 00:47:26,009
with two precision lifts on the crane.

799
00:47:26,677 --> 00:47:30,222
-ENGINEER 1: West, slow.
-ENGINEER 2: West. Slow.

800
00:47:34,059 --> 00:47:35,811
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

801
00:47:35,894 --> 00:47:37,062
-ENGINEER 1: Stop.
-ENGINEER 2: Stop.

802
00:47:37,271 --> 00:47:38,522
MALE TECH: Hey, you gotta see this.

803
00:47:38,605 --> 00:47:40,732
NARRATOR: It's a delicate balancing act,

804
00:47:40,941 --> 00:47:43,902
lining it up precisely to mate
to the body of the rover...

805
00:47:45,028 --> 00:47:48,532
matching two pins to corresponding holes
on the chassis.

806
00:47:50,367 --> 00:47:51,785
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

807
00:47:57,374 --> 00:47:59,376
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

808
00:48:00,502 --> 00:48:04,715
NARRATOR: The tolerance of the pinholes
is one one-thousandth of an inch.

809
00:48:04,798 --> 00:48:05,799
ENGINEER 1: Stop.

810
00:48:07,384 --> 00:48:08,468
ENGINEER 2: Okay.

811
00:48:10,220 --> 00:48:13,515
NARRATOR: The lead mobility tech makes
the final connections.

812
00:48:15,726 --> 00:48:17,728
ENGINEER: In line, 340. Correct.

813
00:48:22,524 --> 00:48:26,236
PASAN: Everybody put so much work
and effort into it,

814
00:48:26,320 --> 00:48:29,197
a little bit of their soul
is in the rover.

815
00:48:29,948 --> 00:48:34,244
The hand touching the work
is what creates it.

816
00:48:35,579 --> 00:48:38,332
It's... it's a great experience.

817
00:48:42,836 --> 00:48:43,879
ENGINEER: Slow.

818
00:48:47,799 --> 00:48:50,636
LACK: Pretty cool.
Starting to look like a rover now.

819
00:48:51,345 --> 00:48:52,429
ENGINEER 2: One more, one more.

820
00:48:53,639 --> 00:48:55,599
MALE TECH 1:
I wanna hug it and kiss it, then...

821
00:48:55,682 --> 00:48:57,601
-MALE TECH 2: Whatever.
-(MALE TECH 1 CHUCKLES)

822
00:49:03,815 --> 00:49:05,609
NARRATOR: The robotic arm is next.

823
00:49:08,654 --> 00:49:11,239
A seven-foot long, five-jointed limb

824
00:49:11,365 --> 00:49:14,117
that will carry the drill turret
and two science instruments

825
00:49:14,201 --> 00:49:15,285
to analyze rocks.

826
00:49:17,621 --> 00:49:20,624
It connects to the rover
through a single mounting plate.

827
00:49:21,375 --> 00:49:24,378
And because this mission
is looking for signs of ancient life,

828
00:49:24,836 --> 00:49:27,464
the mating surfaces,
which won't come apart again,

829
00:49:27,631 --> 00:49:29,633
have to be as clean as possible.

830
00:49:32,052 --> 00:49:34,805
MOOGEGA: It's my job
to make sure that as we build this rover

831
00:49:35,055 --> 00:49:37,683
that we do it in a clean way
so that we don't contaminate Mars

832
00:49:37,766 --> 00:49:39,101
with our Earth bacteria.

833
00:49:39,977 --> 00:49:41,687
Because we're bringing samples back,

834
00:49:41,770 --> 00:49:45,315
we also have to make sure
that we don't find any dead bodies

835
00:49:45,399 --> 00:49:49,736
of Earth bacteria that may be mistaken
for ancient fossilized microbial life.

836
00:49:51,863 --> 00:49:53,490
NARRATOR:
They sample for certain microbes

837
00:49:53,573 --> 00:49:55,867
that could potentially survive
both the cleaning

838
00:49:55,951 --> 00:49:57,911
and the lethal environment of space.

839
00:49:59,204 --> 00:50:00,914
MOOGEGA: The spacecraft isn't sterile

840
00:50:00,998 --> 00:50:04,167
but we have a maximum limit
based on this whole journey.

841
00:50:04,292 --> 00:50:07,254
It can still be a certain level of "dirty"

842
00:50:07,337 --> 00:50:10,424
and still be clean enough
so that it doesn't contaminate Mars,

843
00:50:10,507 --> 00:50:12,134
because it goes
through these harsh environments.

844
00:50:20,434 --> 00:50:22,561
-(MACHINE WHIRS)
-ENGINEER: Stop.

845
00:50:22,644 --> 00:50:23,729
-(OBJECT CLACKING)
-ENGINEER 1: Stop.

846
00:50:27,774 --> 00:50:29,359
ENGINEER: Yeah.
Just close to this side.

847
00:50:29,443 --> 00:50:30,777
MALE TECH: Yeah.

848
00:50:31,069 --> 00:50:32,863
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

849
00:50:36,783 --> 00:50:39,703
NARRATOR: The turret,
the business end of the robotic arm,

850
00:50:40,037 --> 00:50:43,623
holds the rock-coring drill
and two science instruments.

851
00:50:48,336 --> 00:50:53,508
ADAM: As the spacecraft
goes from an idea to reality,

852
00:50:54,217 --> 00:50:58,180
there are less and less opportunities
to catch mistakes.

853
00:50:58,388 --> 00:51:02,517
And people have got to be willing
to call out when something's not right.

854
00:51:02,768 --> 00:51:04,644
Because it... you can't sort of fake it.

855
00:51:04,728 --> 00:51:05,896
ENGINEER: We need to pop a little.

856
00:51:06,021 --> 00:51:08,982
IVAN: You have to make sure
it's done 100 percent right.

857
00:51:09,357 --> 00:51:13,737
The rhythm, the movement,
that also has to be perfect.

858
00:51:14,237 --> 00:51:16,031
You're holding out the torque wrench.

859
00:51:16,114 --> 00:51:19,242
You're turning it. "Click." Ah, perfect.

860
00:51:19,451 --> 00:51:22,370
Now, that's been torqued.
Now, you have to get the tool out.

861
00:51:22,537 --> 00:51:25,082
Make sure it's coming out straight.
Don't hit anything.

862
00:51:25,957 --> 00:51:29,503
JIM: Trying to cover up or hide a mistake
is totally taboo.

863
00:51:30,003 --> 00:51:32,464
Let's say you dropped a fastener.

864
00:51:33,507 --> 00:51:34,883
"Clink, clink, clink, clink, clink."

865
00:51:35,717 --> 00:51:37,761
If you don't tell anybody,

866
00:51:38,095 --> 00:51:41,723
there is a possibility that
that fastener could

867
00:51:41,973 --> 00:51:43,934
stop something from working properly.

868
00:51:44,518 --> 00:51:47,813
It's just understood, you make a mistake,
you come talk to us.

869
00:51:50,649 --> 00:51:53,944
ADAM: So, hand labor
at the point of the spear

870
00:51:54,027 --> 00:52:00,742
where a mistake can mean
two billion dollars, is very unusual

871
00:52:00,867 --> 00:52:04,371
and very intense
and demands tremendous integrity

872
00:52:04,579 --> 00:52:05,789
of the people doing it.

873
00:52:08,792 --> 00:52:13,880
NARRATOR: Now, the fiendishly complex,
unearthly clean sampling handling system.

874
00:52:14,840 --> 00:52:16,967
They're building
two potential flight versions,

875
00:52:17,134 --> 00:52:19,052
one of which will go to Mars.

876
00:52:20,011 --> 00:52:23,265
Neither is ready yet but one of them
has to go into the rover now

877
00:52:23,348 --> 00:52:25,517
to make sure it fits
and connects properly.

878
00:52:27,144 --> 00:52:29,437
So, this one will be coming back out
eventually.

879
00:52:32,899 --> 00:52:35,277
The bit carousel
is another intricate part

880
00:52:35,360 --> 00:52:38,530
of the sampling system
that delivers bits to the drill.

881
00:52:39,573 --> 00:52:41,491
And another challenge to keep clean.

882
00:52:42,367 --> 00:52:45,704
SETH: It is all about
being a contortionist with this thing.

883
00:52:45,787 --> 00:52:49,207
And you have to be
a sterile contortionist on top of it.

884
00:52:50,041 --> 00:52:52,127
It is a very tight area.

885
00:52:55,172 --> 00:52:57,257
It's definitely
like nothing else we've dealt with.

886
00:52:59,509 --> 00:53:02,470
NARRATOR: Finally,
the Ingenuity helicopter.

887
00:53:03,138 --> 00:53:06,391
It will ride to Mars mounted
on the belly pan underneath the rover

888
00:53:06,808 --> 00:53:08,852
and drop free when it's time to fly.

889
00:53:17,110 --> 00:53:19,988
CHRISTIAN: This is something
that not very many people get to do...

890
00:53:22,616 --> 00:53:24,743
build these spacecraft
with their bare hands.

891
00:53:26,912 --> 00:53:29,623
So being a part of this is pretty amazing.

892
00:53:31,208 --> 00:53:32,459
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

893
00:53:32,626 --> 00:53:36,296
WILLIFORD: One of the most incredible
things about being at JPL as a scientist

894
00:53:36,379 --> 00:53:39,382
is putting together this scientific way
of thinking,

895
00:53:39,549 --> 00:53:43,595
that is really trying to understand
how natural systems work,

896
00:53:43,803 --> 00:53:46,514
next to these engineers
who are thinking about,

897
00:53:46,681 --> 00:53:50,644
how can we build something
that allows scientists

898
00:53:50,727 --> 00:53:52,854
to answer these questions?

899
00:53:53,480 --> 00:53:56,691
And then you have these
incredibly talented technicians

900
00:53:56,900 --> 00:54:01,404
who are out there really on the frontlines
putting things together.

901
00:54:01,571 --> 00:54:04,074
And it really is astounding.
I mean, just the artistry.

902
00:54:04,491 --> 00:54:08,620
The level of detail and complexity
is mind-blowing.

903
00:54:09,871 --> 00:54:13,083
We have these wiring systems
that are all bundled together.

904
00:54:13,541 --> 00:54:16,503
And then that whole bundle
is tied together with string.

905
00:54:16,753 --> 00:54:21,049
And that has always just struck me
as just such a beautiful thing that we do.

906
00:54:21,132 --> 00:54:24,970
This incredibly hi-tech enterprise
and operation,

907
00:54:25,053 --> 00:54:29,432
and you see little bits of string,
you know, holding it together just so.

908
00:54:29,557 --> 00:54:30,767
It's really wonderful.

909
00:54:33,144 --> 00:54:36,648
NARRATOR: Perseverance is now ready
for its most demanding test,

910
00:54:36,815 --> 00:54:40,110
the Space Simulator,
where the gloves come off,

911
00:54:40,360 --> 00:54:43,530
and it will have to prove itself
under Mars conditions.

912
00:54:44,739 --> 00:54:46,616
MICHAEL: That is a biggie.
If we get through that,

913
00:54:46,700 --> 00:54:48,576
you can really have a good determination

914
00:54:48,660 --> 00:54:50,787
of, "Are we gonna go or not go?"

915
00:54:54,708 --> 00:54:56,751
NARRATOR: Before it goes
to the Space Simulator,

916
00:54:56,835 --> 00:55:00,797
the rover has to pass another test,
mated to the descent stage.

917
00:55:02,465 --> 00:55:04,968
Mounted together
the way they'll fly to Mars,

918
00:55:05,218 --> 00:55:08,179
they're going to experience
some of the stress of launch.

919
00:55:11,141 --> 00:55:14,477
This is the vibration table,
and its job is to simulate

920
00:55:14,602 --> 00:55:19,274
the experience of sitting upside down
on an Atlas V rocket during lift off.

921
00:55:22,819 --> 00:55:24,487
Just one of the many indignities

922
00:55:24,612 --> 00:55:26,781
they will have to endure
on the way to Mars.

923
00:55:31,745 --> 00:55:33,538
A few days later,
the rover moves on alone

924
00:55:33,705 --> 00:55:35,999
to the 25-foot Space Simulator.

925
00:55:39,919 --> 00:55:43,631
For the first time,
it carries its weight on its own wheels.

926
00:55:43,757 --> 00:55:46,051
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

927
00:55:47,719 --> 00:55:50,430
NARRATOR:
Now, comes two weeks of virtual Mars,

928
00:55:50,597 --> 00:55:53,308
a critical test of survival
for the journey ahead,

929
00:55:53,516 --> 00:55:56,019
and at least two Earth years
on the surface.

930
00:56:02,484 --> 00:56:03,943
MICHAEL: That is a major milestone

931
00:56:04,027 --> 00:56:06,279
because that's where we actually
get to run the rover

932
00:56:06,363 --> 00:56:09,366
through all its functions
as if it was sitting on Mars.

933
00:56:10,116 --> 00:56:13,745
You know, so, everyone's excited to get it
in the chamber, start that testing.

934
00:56:14,788 --> 00:56:16,039
We get through that,

935
00:56:16,247 --> 00:56:18,666
now we're on the downhill side
towards launch.

936
00:56:23,380 --> 00:56:26,883
We have the Mars rover in the chamber

937
00:56:26,966 --> 00:56:29,552
right now, doing her system thermal test.

938
00:56:29,928 --> 00:56:34,182
Over in this room, over here,
we have the ATLO team,

939
00:56:34,265 --> 00:56:37,394
the ATLO systems team,
who's controlling the spacecraft right now

940
00:56:37,519 --> 00:56:38,978
as she's powered on.

941
00:56:40,230 --> 00:56:42,023
We're working 24 hours a day,

942
00:56:42,148 --> 00:56:45,068
seven days a week
for 14 days on this test,

943
00:56:45,193 --> 00:56:49,948
and we haven't killed anybody yet.
(CHUCKLES) Not from lack of trying.

944
00:56:51,574 --> 00:56:52,742
(INDISTINCT CHATTER OVER RADIO)

945
00:56:52,826 --> 00:56:56,913
ART: That's our baby in the chamber,
getting ready to go.

946
00:56:57,539 --> 00:57:02,377
To think that in about ten months,
it's actually on her way to Mars. Yeah.

947
00:57:02,627 --> 00:57:06,172
And just over a year, about 15 months,
she'll actually be on Mars.

948
00:57:06,464 --> 00:57:07,632
That's pretty amazing.

949
00:57:08,675 --> 00:57:11,177
Yeah. When you're in the heat of battle,

950
00:57:11,261 --> 00:57:14,013
sometimes you forget
and it gets frustrating,

951
00:57:14,180 --> 00:57:16,558
but you gotta take a step back
periodically and go,

952
00:57:16,641 --> 00:57:19,394
"I'm building something
that's going to Mars, again."

953
00:57:19,519 --> 00:57:20,770
They've been wanting...

954
00:57:21,396 --> 00:57:22,397
-ART: Was it?
-Yeah.

955
00:57:23,273 --> 00:57:26,025
MICHAEL: This is by far
our biggest test, and so far,

956
00:57:26,109 --> 00:57:28,653
everything is working as expected.

957
00:57:29,446 --> 00:57:32,282
We have now hit a point
where the smallest little thing

958
00:57:32,365 --> 00:57:36,995
that you wouldn't even think of
can basically end the mission,

959
00:57:37,162 --> 00:57:40,498
and it could be something
so small as just dropping a screw.

960
00:57:41,416 --> 00:57:44,502
Once we get through this test,
we do not have the time anymore

961
00:57:44,586 --> 00:57:47,797
to react to any kind of large mistake.

962
00:57:48,256 --> 00:57:49,799
Point of no return, I call it.

963
00:57:51,259 --> 00:57:53,136
NARRATOR: The launch deadline is firm.

964
00:57:53,344 --> 00:57:55,763
Earth and Mars line up close enough
to make it happen

965
00:57:55,847 --> 00:57:58,057
just once every 26 months.

966
00:57:59,267 --> 00:58:00,685
Miss that opportunity,

967
00:58:00,852 --> 00:58:03,771
and the next one
is another 26 months away.

968
00:58:07,025 --> 00:58:09,861
The rover has now finished its time
in the chamber.

969
00:58:10,069 --> 00:58:11,362
Everything is working.

970
00:58:13,239 --> 00:58:16,534
From here, it goes back
to the cleanroom for its final tune-up.

971
00:58:18,912 --> 00:58:22,624
In a little over two months,
the entire spacecraft and JPL team

972
00:58:22,707 --> 00:58:26,211
will move to Cape Canaveral, Florida
to prepare for launch in July.

973
00:58:28,421 --> 00:58:31,925
The one thing that's not quite ready yet
is the centerpiece of the mission,

974
00:58:32,467 --> 00:58:35,303
the robotic system to drill
and cache Martian rock samples

975
00:58:35,637 --> 00:58:37,597
for eventual return to Earth.

976
00:58:37,805 --> 00:58:39,766
(WHIRS)

977
00:58:39,933 --> 00:58:43,520
ADAM: It is an amazingly daunting,

978
00:58:43,770 --> 00:58:47,941
complex system that we needed
to assemble to get this job done.

979
00:58:48,024 --> 00:58:52,654
So complicated that it took us longer
to get it together

980
00:58:52,987 --> 00:58:55,698
than we ever dreamed it would.

981
00:58:55,990 --> 00:58:57,450
(WHIRS)

982
00:58:57,575 --> 00:58:59,827
NARRATOR: Now,
only ten months before launch,

983
00:58:59,994 --> 00:59:03,706
this dirty testing version of the hardware
is running a full sampling sequence,

984
00:59:03,831 --> 00:59:06,125
end-to-end, for the first time.

985
00:59:08,253 --> 00:59:11,464
Awesome. Not bad.

986
00:59:12,423 --> 00:59:13,466
NARRATOR: Success.

987
00:59:14,008 --> 00:59:17,303
But now it has to do the same thing
under Mars conditions.

988
00:59:19,264 --> 00:59:22,850
So, as Perseverance finishes up
in the big Space Simulator,

989
00:59:23,059 --> 00:59:26,521
the sampling system is moving
into a smaller chamber next door.

990
00:59:27,814 --> 00:59:31,401
The entire rig, robotic arm, drill turret,

991
00:59:31,568 --> 00:59:34,362
sampling handling system,
and an assortment of rocks to drill,

992
00:59:34,445 --> 00:59:36,990
will be lifted
into the vertical vacuum chamber.

993
00:59:41,786 --> 00:59:45,081
Once sealed inside,
the system will have to prove itself,

994
00:59:45,164 --> 00:59:48,251
repeatedly drilling cores
and handling samples

995
00:59:48,334 --> 00:59:52,005
exactly as it will happen on the frigid,
airless surface of Mars.

996
00:59:55,133 --> 00:59:58,303
And the first attempt does not go well.

997
01:00:01,889 --> 01:00:06,769
ADAM: The very first time
we went up the hill to our vacuum chamber

998
01:00:06,978 --> 01:00:11,733
that allows us to core in the conditions
that we expect to see on Mars.

999
01:00:13,067 --> 01:00:15,320
The very first tube
we put into the coring bit,

1000
01:00:15,486 --> 01:00:18,239
we put that bit. We took a corer...
(MIMICS DRILL WHIRRING)

1001
01:00:18,406 --> 01:00:21,909
We broke it off. Click.
We brought it back into the rover.

1002
01:00:22,201 --> 01:00:25,038
We took our little sample handling arm,
reached up,

1003
01:00:25,413 --> 01:00:27,123
and went to pull out the tube...

1004
01:00:28,166 --> 01:00:30,752
and the tube was stuck inside the bit.

1005
01:00:31,711 --> 01:00:33,796
We're now calling that Excalibur.

1006
01:00:34,172 --> 01:00:37,759
The sword is stuck in the stone.
The tube is stuck in the bit.

1007
01:00:38,217 --> 01:00:39,969
What's the significance of that?

1008
01:00:40,970 --> 01:00:44,474
Well, that means that if we can't get
that tube out of the bit,

1009
01:00:44,599 --> 01:00:46,726
this bit is no longer of any use to us.

1010
01:00:47,060 --> 01:00:49,228
We have six of these bits all in.

1011
01:00:49,646 --> 01:00:52,607
So, we could stick a tube
in a bit six times

1012
01:00:52,732 --> 01:00:54,984
before it would be game over
for taking corers.

1013
01:00:56,527 --> 01:00:58,905
We start to look in detail
at some of the mechanisms

1014
01:00:59,030 --> 01:01:00,365
that could be involved.

1015
01:01:01,407 --> 01:01:03,493
There is another set of tubes
that have gone through

1016
01:01:03,576 --> 01:01:05,995
our final flight cleaning process.

1017
01:01:06,954 --> 01:01:08,998
We're starting to exercise those tubes,

1018
01:01:09,082 --> 01:01:11,834
not in the dirty testing,
but in another vacuum chamber.

1019
01:01:13,378 --> 01:01:16,297
And there we see things
that don't look that great.

1020
01:01:16,923 --> 01:01:19,801
Those mechanisms
are showing us stickiness

1021
01:01:20,093 --> 01:01:23,971
that's very close to locking
the mechanism up and making it unusable.

1022
01:01:25,014 --> 01:01:27,266
And some of them, if they failed...

1023
01:01:28,601 --> 01:01:30,144
essentially the mission is over.

1024
01:01:34,023 --> 01:01:36,275
NARRATOR: That stickiness, friction,

1025
01:01:36,651 --> 01:01:40,405
turns out to be an unintended consequence
of the extreme cleaning regimen

1026
01:01:40,571 --> 01:01:42,907
the tubes and their mechanisms
have gone through

1027
01:01:43,408 --> 01:01:46,661
to prevent them from contaminating samples
collected on Mars.

1028
01:01:49,163 --> 01:01:51,708
Powerful solvents
and a high temperature bake out

1029
01:01:51,833 --> 01:01:54,001
drove off every trace of hydrocarbons...

1030
01:01:55,002 --> 01:01:59,841
including a microscopic layer that remains
on conventionally sterilized surfaces.

1031
01:02:02,260 --> 01:02:03,511
Interesting thing.

1032
01:02:04,095 --> 01:02:07,515
Our engineers... do tests about friction,

1033
01:02:07,598 --> 01:02:12,019
understand how to design mechanisms
based entirely on data...

1034
01:02:12,979 --> 01:02:16,399
of materials that have that thin layer
of the hydrocarbons on them.

1035
01:02:17,275 --> 01:02:23,781
No mechanisms, no devices,
no robots have ever been made

1036
01:02:23,865 --> 01:02:25,908
or conceived of to be this clean.

1037
01:02:26,242 --> 01:02:28,911
So, all of our understanding
about friction,

1038
01:02:28,995 --> 01:02:31,831
about ways metals mate and don't mate,

1039
01:02:32,290 --> 01:02:36,753
is all based on metals that have
this very thin coating of hydrocarbons.

1040
01:02:37,795 --> 01:02:40,465
This isn't an issue of workmanship.

1041
01:02:40,673 --> 01:02:44,969
It is really an issue
of creating mechanisms

1042
01:02:45,219 --> 01:02:49,724
that are unearthly in their cleanliness
and their function

1043
01:02:49,974 --> 01:02:53,311
is changed by that unearthly cleanliness.

1044
01:02:53,853 --> 01:02:56,063
Reasonably, we should have expected that.

1045
01:02:56,189 --> 01:02:59,859
But we didn't really have
a finished flight design

1046
01:02:59,942 --> 01:03:04,155
to put through those tests four years ago
when we committed to this.

1047
01:03:04,489 --> 01:03:06,699
And so now,
it's only now when we're done

1048
01:03:07,158 --> 01:03:08,951
that we put it through the tests
and we're like,

1049
01:03:09,035 --> 01:03:10,536
"Well, there's some problems here."

1050
01:03:11,704 --> 01:03:12,955
NARRATOR: The question now is,

1051
01:03:13,039 --> 01:03:16,626
can the hardware be made reliable enough
to launch in July 2020,

1052
01:03:16,876 --> 01:03:18,169
just eight months away?

1053
01:03:19,003 --> 01:03:20,671
Or should they buy more time

1054
01:03:20,755 --> 01:03:23,966
and slip launch the next opportunity
in 2022?

1055
01:03:24,050 --> 01:03:25,968
(RATTLING)

1056
01:03:26,052 --> 01:03:28,888
What is good enough, right? We...

1057
01:03:31,599 --> 01:03:33,267
None of us really know.

1058
01:03:33,851 --> 01:03:36,687
My previous experience
has been landing.

1059
01:03:37,188 --> 01:03:39,023
Landing's very binary.

1060
01:03:39,357 --> 01:03:41,692
Good enough is safely landing the vehicle.

1061
01:03:41,776 --> 01:03:42,944
(ALL CHEERING)

1062
01:03:43,402 --> 01:03:44,445
Done.

1063
01:03:47,782 --> 01:03:50,910
If our sampling system successfully
gets 30 samples

1064
01:03:50,993 --> 01:03:53,412
and then fails, well, okay,
that's good enough.

1065
01:03:54,747 --> 01:03:55,790
Twenty?

1066
01:03:57,124 --> 01:03:59,252
Maybe that's good enough. Ten?

1067
01:04:00,419 --> 01:04:01,587
Not good enough.

1068
01:04:04,173 --> 01:04:05,967
NARRATOR: To miss the launch deadline,

1069
01:04:06,217 --> 01:04:08,636
putting everything on hold for 26 months,

1070
01:04:09,011 --> 01:04:11,973
would cost
at least five hundred million dollars

1071
01:04:12,223 --> 01:04:15,059
and complicate planning
for the sample return mission.

1072
01:04:15,935 --> 01:04:19,272
But launching on schedule
and failing to collect enough samples

1073
01:04:19,397 --> 01:04:20,523
would be worse.

1074
01:04:22,358 --> 01:04:24,694
ADAM: Because this sampling mission
is the first

1075
01:04:24,777 --> 01:04:27,280
in a three-mission program

1076
01:04:27,905 --> 01:04:29,824
spanning over a decade,

1077
01:04:30,199 --> 01:04:34,370
resulting in samples from Mars
being returned to Earth,

1078
01:04:34,871 --> 01:04:38,082
some of our sampling system mechanisms,
if they failed,

1079
01:04:38,332 --> 01:04:40,626
could not only kill this mission,

1080
01:04:41,127 --> 01:04:45,756
they kill the follow up missions.
The stakes are kind of unbelievably high.

1081
01:04:46,883 --> 01:04:49,343
NARRATOR: By mid-February,
six weeks away,

1082
01:04:49,760 --> 01:04:51,762
they have to decide
whether to move the spacecraft

1083
01:04:51,971 --> 01:04:53,723
to Florida and prepare for launch...

1084
01:04:54,599 --> 01:04:56,475
or punt to 2022.

1085
01:04:57,643 --> 01:05:00,479
Between now and then,
the project will focus on getting

1086
01:05:00,563 --> 01:05:02,565
the evidence they need
to make that decision.

1087
01:05:02,732 --> 01:05:05,067
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

1088
01:05:05,735 --> 01:05:07,111
ADAM: We launch in July.

1089
01:05:07,320 --> 01:05:10,865
We're December, we won't be done
with this assessment in January.

1090
01:05:11,073 --> 01:05:13,826
We won't be done
with this assessment in February.

1091
01:05:14,243 --> 01:05:16,787
But you don't wanna pack the thing up
and ship it to the Cape

1092
01:05:16,871 --> 01:05:18,956
if you're not gonna then launch it.

1093
01:05:24,503 --> 01:05:27,924
NARRATOR: It's not unusual
for Mars missions to flirt with disaster.

1094
01:05:28,299 --> 01:05:30,217
In fact, it's almost routine.

1095
01:05:30,718 --> 01:05:33,763
Since each new mission
is trying to do something

1096
01:05:34,055 --> 01:05:35,765
that hasn't been done before.

1097
01:05:37,099 --> 01:05:40,519
ADAM: There is an escalation
there due to the arms race

1098
01:05:40,728 --> 01:05:45,399
between exploration technology
and that which demands to be explored.

1099
01:05:46,442 --> 01:05:51,781
I mean, this is so much more
incredibly intense than Curiosity,

1100
01:05:52,031 --> 01:05:56,118
which slipped because it was
so much more incredibly intense

1101
01:05:56,535 --> 01:05:57,912
than Spirit and Opportunity,

1102
01:05:58,079 --> 01:06:00,790
which were... I mean, each time, right,
our ambitions,

1103
01:06:00,915 --> 01:06:03,501
we step up to a bigger plate.

1104
01:06:04,126 --> 01:06:07,213
We take a swing at it
and we come very close to not making it.

1105
01:06:10,508 --> 01:06:13,260
I think that that's good in some regards.

1106
01:06:13,344 --> 01:06:15,513
I believe that one of the things
that we're doing here

1107
01:06:15,596 --> 01:06:19,600
is performance art
in The Art of the Possible.

1108
01:06:19,684 --> 01:06:22,311
We're asked... this lab is a place
where we do things

1109
01:06:22,395 --> 01:06:24,397
that people don't think can be done.

1110
01:06:24,730 --> 01:06:29,068
But that means you're very close
to doing something that can't be done!

1111
01:06:31,570 --> 01:06:33,322
NARRATOR: To understand
what they're up against,

1112
01:06:33,572 --> 01:06:35,241
they'll need
all the sample system hardware

1113
01:06:35,324 --> 01:06:36,534
for new testing.

1114
01:06:37,994 --> 01:06:41,455
So, the version installed in the rover
a few months ago is coming out.

1115
01:06:43,541 --> 01:06:45,835
The other flight unit,
the one that's been struggling

1116
01:06:45,960 --> 01:06:48,713
in the clean vacuum chamber,
is also coming out.

1117
01:06:50,006 --> 01:06:52,049
Both are headed back
to the ultraclean room

1118
01:06:52,133 --> 01:06:55,094
while the team comes up
with a plan to save the mission.

1119
01:06:58,597 --> 01:07:00,224
The rover is ready to go.

1120
01:07:01,684 --> 01:07:05,438
It survived the Space Simulator
and passed its first driving test.

1121
01:07:07,898 --> 01:07:09,358
FEMALE VOICE: Whoo!

1122
01:07:09,442 --> 01:07:12,111
-MALE VOICE: It's moving!
-FEMALE VOICE 1: Oh, my gosh!

1123
01:07:13,446 --> 01:07:15,948
NARRATOR: The JPL crew
is preparing to take it to Florida

1124
01:07:16,032 --> 01:07:17,783
for the final push to launch.

1125
01:07:20,619 --> 01:07:24,623
But with the sampling system in trouble
and the launch deadline in jeopardy,

1126
01:07:24,790 --> 01:07:27,251
no one really knows
what's going to happen next.

1127
01:07:29,545 --> 01:07:32,381
SETH: At this point,
usually the guts of the rover are set.

1128
01:07:33,174 --> 01:07:35,051
Once it's closed up,
this is where everything is gonna live

1129
01:07:35,134 --> 01:07:36,302
and it's not like that anymore.

1130
01:07:37,803 --> 01:07:40,431
There's always kind of a straggler,
there's always a problem and like,

1131
01:07:40,514 --> 01:07:42,308
"Oh, we'll deal with it in Florida,"

1132
01:07:42,391 --> 01:07:43,809
but not on this scale.

1133
01:07:45,019 --> 01:07:46,771
ADAM: It has not been easy.

1134
01:07:47,605 --> 01:07:50,483
I've never felt as much uncertainty.

1135
01:07:50,900 --> 01:07:53,235
But we haven't played all the cards yet.

1136
01:08:00,951 --> 01:08:04,580
NARRATOR: The Perseverance rover,
the spacecraft that takes it to Mars,

1137
01:08:04,789 --> 01:08:06,665
and the team that put it all together,

1138
01:08:06,874 --> 01:08:09,376
are supposed to move to Florida
in just about a month

1139
01:08:09,502 --> 01:08:11,462
to prepare for launch in July.

1140
01:08:14,090 --> 01:08:17,051
The primary mission
is to drill Martian rock cores,

1141
01:08:17,301 --> 01:08:18,969
cache them in sterile tubes,

1142
01:08:19,136 --> 01:08:21,305
and leave them on Mars
for a future mission

1143
01:08:21,388 --> 01:08:23,432
to pick up and return to Earth.

1144
01:08:24,683 --> 01:08:28,395
The rover and the rest of the spacecraft
have been tested, proven,

1145
01:08:28,521 --> 01:08:29,814
and are ready to go.

1146
01:08:33,400 --> 01:08:36,445
But problems with the rover's
crucial sample handling system

1147
01:08:36,570 --> 01:08:40,074
have forced a last minute scramble
to meet the launch deadline.

1148
01:08:41,659 --> 01:08:46,997
We'd been working on this for a long time
and we followed every protocol.

1149
01:08:47,081 --> 01:08:50,334
We did everything
that had been outlined for us to do.

1150
01:08:51,043 --> 01:08:54,755
But a lot of people were worried
that when we got to Mars

1151
01:08:54,880 --> 01:08:58,384
something would get stuck,
and mission over,

1152
01:08:58,467 --> 01:09:00,803
and we wouldn't be able
to take any samples.

1153
01:09:00,970 --> 01:09:04,723
So, they decided that we needed
to take a step back

1154
01:09:04,807 --> 01:09:07,059
and try to figure out what we're doing.

1155
01:09:07,810 --> 01:09:09,812
ADAM: We are in the middle
of a suite of testing.

1156
01:09:10,521 --> 01:09:14,942
Both dirty testing up the hill
in a vacuum chamber

1157
01:09:15,067 --> 01:09:18,529
where we're simulating
Mars' environments, and dirtiness,

1158
01:09:18,612 --> 01:09:23,200
and coring, and looking where dust moves,
and how it gets into trouble or not.

1159
01:09:23,742 --> 01:09:25,828
And also very clean hardware.

1160
01:09:26,453 --> 01:09:28,080
The hardware that we want to take to Mars,

1161
01:09:28,581 --> 01:09:30,541
testing in a very clean vacuum chamber.

1162
01:09:31,375 --> 01:09:36,297
Long days, nights and weekends,
some folks are running 24/7.

1163
01:09:36,797 --> 01:09:40,342
And we've had... problems.

1164
01:09:40,634 --> 01:09:42,136
(WHIRS)

1165
01:09:42,303 --> 01:09:43,470
NARRATOR: Two months ago,

1166
01:09:43,679 --> 01:09:45,306
the first time they tried to core a rock

1167
01:09:45,389 --> 01:09:47,683
in the Space Simulator
under Mars' conditions,

1168
01:09:48,058 --> 01:09:50,644
the sample tube got stuck in the bit.

1169
01:09:52,438 --> 01:09:54,356
They called it Excalibur.

1170
01:09:54,773 --> 01:09:58,110
Since then, they've learned
that's not their biggest problem.

1171
01:09:58,527 --> 01:10:00,237
ADAM: So, we have that Excalibur
that got stuck,

1172
01:10:00,321 --> 01:10:03,282
and the analysis suggests
we've got a piece of dirt

1173
01:10:03,365 --> 01:10:06,368
or debris just in an awkward position.

1174
01:10:06,577 --> 01:10:09,997
We've continued to successfully
take cores in dirty testing.

1175
01:10:10,080 --> 01:10:11,665
We're now up to core 13.

1176
01:10:13,250 --> 01:10:14,501
NARRATOR: That's the good news.

1177
01:10:14,668 --> 01:10:17,296
But the investigation into why Excalibur
got stuck

1178
01:10:17,421 --> 01:10:20,507
has uncovered other,
more serious problems.

1179
01:10:21,050 --> 01:10:22,343
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

1180
01:10:22,551 --> 01:10:23,677
ADAM: The new things
that have happened

1181
01:10:23,802 --> 01:10:25,888
is in our thermal vacuum chamber

1182
01:10:26,013 --> 01:10:27,890
with the clean hardware
that's going to Mars,

1183
01:10:28,098 --> 01:10:29,516
at cold temperatures,

1184
01:10:29,642 --> 01:10:33,646
we saw lots of failures to get tubes
just to go into the bits.

1185
01:10:34,563 --> 01:10:37,650
A piece that worked every time
in dirty testing,

1186
01:10:37,733 --> 01:10:40,069
was working almost zero times

1187
01:10:40,277 --> 01:10:43,364
in our cold temperature
thermal vacuum chamber.

1188
01:10:44,198 --> 01:10:47,493
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

1189
01:10:47,868 --> 01:10:49,995
ADAM: We now have a war room.

1190
01:10:50,579 --> 01:10:52,706
For a vast majority of the hours of day,

1191
01:10:52,831 --> 01:10:55,417
there's people in that war room
working those problems.

1192
01:10:55,501 --> 01:10:56,919
FEMALE VOICE: Flight stuff is good.

1193
01:10:57,962 --> 01:11:01,298
ADAM: As each issue comes up,
we work to knock it down,

1194
01:11:01,507 --> 01:11:06,053
to understand it,
to figure out if we can live with it.

1195
01:11:07,263 --> 01:11:10,099
(SIGHS)

1196
01:11:10,391 --> 01:11:16,897
Every morning... I come in...
ready to kick the butt

1197
01:11:17,189 --> 01:11:19,608
of every problem we've got on our list,

1198
01:11:19,733 --> 01:11:21,652
and every evening I leave...

1199
01:11:23,904 --> 01:11:28,409
feeling a little discouraged that maybe
we're not gonna kick all of the butts.

1200
01:11:28,575 --> 01:11:31,287
The good news is the next morning,
I've reset

1201
01:11:31,620 --> 01:11:32,621
and I'm ready to kick them.

1202
01:11:36,959 --> 01:11:38,836
NARRATOR: Even if all the butts get kicked

1203
01:11:38,919 --> 01:11:41,505
and they proceed with plans
to launch in July,

1204
01:11:41,797 --> 01:11:43,716
the sample handling system
still won't be ready

1205
01:11:43,799 --> 01:11:45,301
to install on the rover

1206
01:11:45,384 --> 01:11:48,220
until after the spacecraft
has moved to Florida.

1207
01:11:51,515 --> 01:11:53,976
LACK:
I think it's going to be a little hectic

1208
01:11:54,059 --> 01:11:57,563
because there's a lot more to do,
but we're gonna figure this out.

1209
01:11:57,646 --> 01:12:02,067
So, let's do what we always do,
let's relax,

1210
01:12:02,192 --> 01:12:05,404
look at the problem, solve it,
and move forward.

1211
01:12:05,904 --> 01:12:07,698
The job that the flight techs do,

1212
01:12:07,906 --> 01:12:10,951
a lot of times we're dealing with people
that are under a lot of stress,

1213
01:12:11,035 --> 01:12:14,455
and we need to know
how to deal with that person

1214
01:12:14,580 --> 01:12:16,665
to really get to what they wanna do.

1215
01:12:18,083 --> 01:12:20,044
LACK: Everybody's still doing their thing.

1216
01:12:20,127 --> 01:12:21,837
(CHUCKLES) They can't stop.

1217
01:12:21,920 --> 01:12:26,342
At this point, everybody is so driven
to take this to its completion

1218
01:12:26,508 --> 01:12:29,011
and make a really good product

1219
01:12:29,178 --> 01:12:31,555
that nothing's gonna stand in their way.

1220
01:12:41,857 --> 01:12:43,150
-ADAM: It's February.
-(DOOR LOCK BEEPS)

1221
01:12:43,484 --> 01:12:46,111
ADAM: Three and a half months have passed

1222
01:12:46,612 --> 01:12:50,032
all in since things got a little sideways.

1223
01:12:51,575 --> 01:12:53,285
Quite literally nights and weekends,

1224
01:12:53,494 --> 01:12:57,539
full team working
through a lot of testing.

1225
01:12:58,123 --> 01:13:00,959
God, we are beating the bejesus
out of this thing.

1226
01:13:01,251 --> 01:13:05,130
We are really working the system
very hard.

1227
01:13:06,673 --> 01:13:08,717
The big thing that we've struggled with

1228
01:13:08,842 --> 01:13:12,513
over the last three months
has been our sampling tubes.

1229
01:13:12,805 --> 01:13:15,391
You know, the sample tubes
go into the bits...

1230
01:13:15,474 --> 01:13:18,018
-(CLINKING)
-...inside the be... the beast.

1231
01:13:18,519 --> 01:13:21,688
Getting them in the bits,
we really struggled with,

1232
01:13:22,189 --> 01:13:25,275
and we really struggled with it
because of friction.

1233
01:13:25,609 --> 01:13:27,361
And because when we make these...

1234
01:13:28,278 --> 01:13:30,531
items unearthly clean,

1235
01:13:31,281 --> 01:13:35,285
the friction that arises
between these metals is much stickier.

1236
01:13:36,370 --> 01:13:41,041
So, our strategy has been to change
the way we clean these tubes.

1237
01:13:41,208 --> 01:13:43,836
We're only doing the unearthly clean

1238
01:13:44,044 --> 01:13:47,256
on the piece of the sample tube
that matters,

1239
01:13:47,506 --> 01:13:49,299
where the sample will come in contact.

1240
01:13:51,343 --> 01:13:53,679
NARRATOR: The tubes get another barrage
of solvent bath

1241
01:13:53,762 --> 01:13:55,139
like they got before.

1242
01:13:58,976 --> 01:14:02,396
But now, there's a final rinse
with another solvent called hexane...

1243
01:14:03,397 --> 01:14:06,650
carefully applied just to the parts
of the tube that would come in contact

1244
01:14:06,775 --> 01:14:08,318
with the sample on Mars.

1245
01:14:12,364 --> 01:14:16,201
All this makes it possible to do
the final bake out at a lower temperature,

1246
01:14:16,368 --> 01:14:19,288
making things a bit less clean
to reduce the friction

1247
01:14:19,455 --> 01:14:21,665
but still clean enough
to protect the samples.

1248
01:14:25,878 --> 01:14:29,631
We were driving the cleanliness
of the mechanism piece

1249
01:14:30,007 --> 01:14:33,343
to as clean as the sample,
the part that the sample has to go into.

1250
01:14:34,052 --> 01:14:39,099
And now we are letting this be, still,
cleanest thing that ever goes into space.

1251
01:14:40,350 --> 01:14:43,020
But only the business end
of the sample tube

1252
01:14:43,187 --> 01:14:45,689
gets this final set of solvent rinses

1253
01:14:45,856 --> 01:14:49,234
which takes it to that unearthly...
level of cleanliness.

1254
01:14:49,693 --> 01:14:50,694
That's helped.

1255
01:14:51,236 --> 01:14:54,781
Second thing we've done
is done a lot of practice

1256
01:14:54,865 --> 01:14:57,743
of getting these... these tubes
into bits

1257
01:14:57,868 --> 01:15:00,621
and discovered methods
with our little robot arm

1258
01:15:00,871 --> 01:15:04,666
inside the vehicle to be successful
even in the presence

1259
01:15:04,791 --> 01:15:07,669
of these higher frictions
than we've hoped for.

1260
01:15:09,004 --> 01:15:10,047
Okay.

1261
01:15:10,881 --> 01:15:11,924
Sweet.

1262
01:15:12,549 --> 01:15:14,927
ADAM: And when we do that, it works.

1263
01:15:15,719 --> 01:15:18,889
So, I think we'll be
probably more successful

1264
01:15:19,306 --> 01:15:21,350
because of our...

1265
01:15:22,184 --> 01:15:25,604
challenges than we would have been
if we hadn't had them.

1266
01:15:26,188 --> 01:15:31,860
We've kind of emerged out the other side
with a deeper understanding

1267
01:15:31,944 --> 01:15:34,905
of the complexities of this thing
that we created.

1268
01:15:35,239 --> 01:15:37,574
Some of which we love,
and some of which we hate...

1269
01:15:38,742 --> 01:15:41,078
but all of which we think we can fly.

1270
01:15:41,328 --> 01:15:44,289
All of which we think
will be successful at Mars.

1271
01:15:53,048 --> 01:15:54,967
LACK: So far,
everything that they came up with

1272
01:15:55,050 --> 01:15:56,802
has worked pretty well.

1273
01:15:57,177 --> 01:16:00,222
And here we are. We're a little late
but we're still gonna make it.

1274
01:16:01,515 --> 01:16:03,559
NARRATOR: The flight bits
have had their final cleaning.

1275
01:16:03,892 --> 01:16:06,979
Once installed in the carousel
that transfers bits to the drill,

1276
01:16:07,104 --> 01:16:10,357
they won't see daylight again
until the rover is on Mars.

1277
01:16:12,943 --> 01:16:13,944
ENGINEER: Okay.

1278
01:16:14,820 --> 01:16:17,239
NARRATOR: They have to be kept
as clean as the tubes,

1279
01:16:17,406 --> 01:16:20,284
so this is an operation
with sterile gloves, masks,

1280
01:16:20,450 --> 01:16:21,952
gowns, and goggles.

1281
01:16:25,581 --> 01:16:29,626
Even so, there's no way to eliminate
all hydrocarbons in the air.

1282
01:16:30,586 --> 01:16:34,756
Those signatures of life are slowly
but steadily coating the hardware.

1283
01:16:35,257 --> 01:16:38,260
So, the action is choreographed
to unfold as quickly,

1284
01:16:38,343 --> 01:16:39,928
but carefully, as possible.

1285
01:16:40,304 --> 01:16:41,430
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

1286
01:16:42,848 --> 01:16:44,808
NARRATOR:
It may look like a sacred ceremony,

1287
01:16:45,100 --> 01:16:47,185
but it's just contamination control.

1288
01:16:47,728 --> 01:16:49,980
THORA: It's a good way to make sure
your fingers don't touch anything else

1289
01:16:50,063 --> 01:16:51,815
-besides the hardware.
-MALE TECH: Yeah.

1290
01:16:51,940 --> 01:16:54,026
THORA: Everyone's got different methods,
like this. They do this, sometimes...

1291
01:16:54,151 --> 01:16:55,319
Sometimes like this.

1292
01:16:55,819 --> 01:16:57,613
NARRATOR: This is another one
of those moments

1293
01:16:57,696 --> 01:16:59,865
when people say goodbye to their hardware.

1294
01:17:00,907 --> 01:17:01,950
MALE TECH: Oh, my gosh.

1295
01:17:02,034 --> 01:17:04,536
I was telling them, it's like
giving away all your puppies.

1296
01:17:04,703 --> 01:17:06,580
(BOTH CHUCKLE)

1297
01:17:06,705 --> 01:17:08,081
MALE TECH: They all find a new home.

1298
01:17:11,293 --> 01:17:12,711
NARRATOR: In the room next door,

1299
01:17:12,878 --> 01:17:16,548
they're selecting the final 43 tubes
that will go to Mars.

1300
01:17:19,051 --> 01:17:21,136
ADAM: There's a lot of inspection steps.

1301
01:17:21,762 --> 01:17:24,931
We wanna choose the most pristine,
the cleanest,

1302
01:17:25,015 --> 01:17:26,683
the best-looking sample tubes.

1303
01:17:27,100 --> 01:17:31,647
A part of our inspection
is baroscopic microscopy down

1304
01:17:31,730 --> 01:17:35,692
into the bore to make sure we've looked
at every single speck,

1305
01:17:35,901 --> 01:17:40,197
fleck, slight reflection,
then clean 'em again.

1306
01:17:41,531 --> 01:17:46,078
We put our sterile flight tubes
in special sheaths,

1307
01:17:46,453 --> 01:17:50,248
and then that assembly goes
into a bake out for sterilization,

1308
01:17:50,457 --> 01:17:52,751
and it's inserted in the flight vehicle...

1309
01:17:53,669 --> 01:17:56,129
just prior to buttoning the vehicle up

1310
01:17:56,213 --> 01:17:58,674
inside the aero shell
and on top of the rocket.

1311
01:18:03,387 --> 01:18:09,351
This is just the start of the journey,
literally, for these pieces of hardware

1312
01:18:09,851 --> 01:18:12,187
which will be the first pieces
of hardware...

1313
01:18:13,980 --> 01:18:19,319
in history to go to another planet
and come back.

1314
01:18:19,903 --> 01:18:22,864
Their trip is just about to start.

1315
01:18:37,462 --> 01:18:40,382
The rover will fly to Florida in a C17.

1316
01:18:43,969 --> 01:18:47,305
It'll never come home
unless something terrible goes wrong.

1317
01:18:49,599 --> 01:18:52,185
It's essentially starting its way to Mars.

1318
01:18:53,895 --> 01:18:55,939
So, we're moving forward.

1319
01:18:57,774 --> 01:19:00,569
NARRATOR: The core JPL team
is moving with it,

1320
01:19:00,652 --> 01:19:02,696
and they'll spend the next five months
in Florida

1321
01:19:02,863 --> 01:19:04,948
getting the spacecraft ready for launch.

1322
01:19:05,031 --> 01:19:07,409
-MALE TECH 1: Come on, come on. Let's go.
-MALE TECH 2: Very good.

1323
01:19:09,619 --> 01:19:11,621
SETH: We were moving everything out
to the Cape...

1324
01:19:13,498 --> 01:19:16,793
and the people that were loading
on the C17's were like,

1325
01:19:16,877 --> 01:19:18,378
"How much is this box worth?"

1326
01:19:18,962 --> 01:19:21,131
-"Two and a half billion."
-(FORKLIFT BEEPING)

1327
01:19:21,256 --> 01:19:23,633
"How much is that box worth?"
"Two and a half billion."

1328
01:19:24,509 --> 01:19:27,053
"And how much is that worth?"
"Two and a half billion."

1329
01:19:27,846 --> 01:19:29,973
The entire project is worth
two and half billion.

1330
01:19:30,098 --> 01:19:32,309
If that falls off a forklift,
that ends it.

1331
01:19:32,392 --> 01:19:35,020
So, everything from here on out
is worth two and a half billion.

1332
01:19:38,023 --> 01:19:39,941
We know what we're getting into a bit.

1333
01:19:40,150 --> 01:19:43,028
We know physically how everything
is supposed to happen.

1334
01:19:43,195 --> 01:19:46,573
It's just when you're at the Cape,
you no longer have home field advantage.

1335
01:19:48,033 --> 01:19:49,743
You can tell people how it's going to be,

1336
01:19:49,826 --> 01:19:51,745
but they don't know
until they get out there.

1337
01:19:53,205 --> 01:19:55,749
NARRATOR: In fact,
no one knows what they're getting into

1338
01:19:55,874 --> 01:19:57,626
in late February 2020.

1339
01:19:59,002 --> 01:20:03,548
Soon after they arrive in Florida,
so does the COVID-19 pandemic.

1340
01:20:03,924 --> 01:20:05,717
(THUNDER RUMBLES)

1341
01:20:07,302 --> 01:20:09,179
NARRATOR: With the mission
and crew at risk,

1342
01:20:09,387 --> 01:20:13,058
NASA locks down the spacecraft cleanroom
to essential personnel.

1343
01:20:14,100 --> 01:20:16,603
Documentary cameras
are now in the hands of techs.

1344
01:20:18,522 --> 01:20:21,900
Until launch, the JPL team is on its own.

1345
01:20:29,366 --> 01:20:31,952
A multibillion-dollar
eight-year production

1346
01:20:32,035 --> 01:20:34,955
with a cast of thousands
is down to just the handful

1347
01:20:35,038 --> 01:20:37,082
of people who know how to assemble
the spacecraft,

1348
01:20:37,415 --> 01:20:40,126
test it, and get it to the Launchpad.

1349
01:20:43,463 --> 01:20:46,132
ADAM: The crew that went down
to Florida...

1350
01:20:46,967 --> 01:20:50,011
that had signed up for, well,
being away from home

1351
01:20:50,095 --> 01:20:54,516
and only seeing them maybe once a month,
have found themselves isolated,

1352
01:20:54,599 --> 01:20:56,893
cut off from friends and family...

1353
01:20:57,894 --> 01:21:01,231
and with the pressure
of the entire project on them. Right?

1354
01:21:01,314 --> 01:21:04,776
No real relief in sight
except for launching this thing.

1355
01:21:04,901 --> 01:21:07,279
(MACHINE BEEPING)

1356
01:21:07,445 --> 01:21:09,656
NARRATOR: Just before the pandemic hit
in Florida,

1357
01:21:09,739 --> 01:21:12,075
NASA revealed the winning entry
in the contest

1358
01:21:12,200 --> 01:21:14,327
to name the Mars 2020 rover...

1359
01:21:15,829 --> 01:21:17,038
Perseverance.

1360
01:21:18,081 --> 01:21:20,041
ADAM: You know,
when we got the name Perseverance...

1361
01:21:21,084 --> 01:21:23,128
we got that on the 5th of March.

1362
01:21:24,087 --> 01:21:28,592
What appeared at the first week
of March like a good name

1363
01:21:28,842 --> 01:21:30,427
has ended up being...

1364
01:21:32,512 --> 01:21:33,889
prophetic, really.

1365
01:21:34,139 --> 01:21:38,310
I mean, I cannot think
of a more perfect name

1366
01:21:38,393 --> 01:21:42,772
for this moment in our project,
for this moment in NASA,

1367
01:21:42,939 --> 01:21:45,567
and perhaps in this moment for the world.

1368
01:21:46,484 --> 01:21:47,944
We're gonna have to persevere.

1369
01:21:52,657 --> 01:21:53,909
NARRATOR: Toward the end of May,

1370
01:21:54,492 --> 01:21:57,454
the final pieces of the spacecraft
arrive in Florida.

1371
01:22:00,081 --> 01:22:02,959
Those unearthly clean sample tubes
that nearly scuttled

1372
01:22:03,043 --> 01:22:04,836
the mission a few months before.

1373
01:22:07,172 --> 01:22:11,176
The sampling system is so complex,
and so vulnerable to contamination,

1374
01:22:11,718 --> 01:22:13,720
the team that built it
traveled with the hardware

1375
01:22:13,803 --> 01:22:16,681
from JPL to do the final installation.

1376
01:22:18,975 --> 01:22:23,647
LACK: At some point, it becomes personal.
That's my hardware.

1377
01:22:25,982 --> 01:22:29,027
My hands have put it all together.
I've built it from nothing.

1378
01:22:32,864 --> 01:22:34,240
If something goes wrong,

1379
01:22:34,324 --> 01:22:37,452
you feel an emotional attachment
to the hardware.

1380
01:22:40,163 --> 01:22:42,707
All the folks that have been building,
all the technicians,

1381
01:22:42,832 --> 01:22:45,877
and other folks, they kind of share
that same attitude.

1382
01:22:48,129 --> 01:22:51,174
They're really involved in it
and they're really taking ownership

1383
01:22:51,257 --> 01:22:52,509
of what they're doing.

1384
01:22:54,469 --> 01:22:56,012
NARRATOR: They made hundreds of tubes.

1385
01:22:56,763 --> 01:22:59,057
Only 43 are going to Mars.

1386
01:23:00,308 --> 01:23:01,851
What happens to the rest?

1387
01:23:03,395 --> 01:23:07,399
They have looked at the internals
and they've estimated

1388
01:23:07,482 --> 01:23:09,859
that it's just shy of a shot.

1389
01:23:10,068 --> 01:23:13,697
So, somebody may fill
one of those and take a shot out of it,

1390
01:23:13,780 --> 01:23:16,449
and not a flight one, but we'll see.

1391
01:23:16,533 --> 01:23:17,617
-(CHUCKLES)
-(CAMERAMAN CHUCKLING)

1392
01:23:24,207 --> 01:23:27,502
NARRATOR: The spacecraft
will soon be on its way to the Launchpad.

1393
01:23:30,046 --> 01:23:32,966
(INDISTINCT CHATTER)

1394
01:23:51,484 --> 01:23:53,445
NARRATOR: The rover
has a nuclear power supply

1395
01:23:53,528 --> 01:23:55,447
that will charge its batteries on Mars.

1396
01:23:56,698 --> 01:23:59,993
The very last job for the techs
is to install it

1397
01:24:00,243 --> 01:24:02,412
when the rover is on top of the rocket.

1398
01:24:04,122 --> 01:24:08,043
JAMES: We are on top of an Atlas V rocket.
Everything is ready to go.

1399
01:24:08,585 --> 01:24:10,920
And this rocket is swaying. (MUMBLES)

1400
01:24:11,337 --> 01:24:15,008
And so, we have this nuclear power source

1401
01:24:15,133 --> 01:24:18,386
that we have on this fixture
to shove it in the rover

1402
01:24:18,553 --> 01:24:21,723
and then bolt it down
before we close it out

1403
01:24:21,848 --> 01:24:24,059
and then put the door on the rocket,
and that's it.

1404
01:24:24,142 --> 01:24:25,602
It's off to the Launchpad after that.

1405
01:24:26,394 --> 01:24:30,065
(HORN BLARING)

1406
01:24:36,488 --> 01:24:39,032
SETH: It is a very unique experience.

1407
01:24:39,282 --> 01:24:43,036
You start having nightmares
about everything going wrong.

1408
01:24:43,787 --> 01:24:47,123
You have trouble sleeping
because once it's taken out to Launchpad,

1409
01:24:47,415 --> 01:24:49,250
there's not a lot else you can do.

1410
01:24:51,377 --> 01:24:53,838
LACK: You've buttoned everything up,
and it's ready to launch.

1411
01:24:54,130 --> 01:24:56,841
So now, you're, like,
"Are we gonna launch?

1412
01:24:56,925 --> 01:24:58,885
"Is everything okay? Is the rocket okay?"

1413
01:25:01,387 --> 01:25:04,182
JIM: Do you realize how many things
have to go right

1414
01:25:04,516 --> 01:25:05,975
for this to actually work?

1415
01:25:11,523 --> 01:25:14,984
We've gone through a set of worries,
gotten those behind us.

1416
01:25:15,527 --> 01:25:18,530
The vehicle's fueled. It's powered.

1417
01:25:19,405 --> 01:25:20,907
It's rolled out on the pad.

1418
01:25:22,408 --> 01:25:23,535
We're ready to go.

1419
01:25:23,743 --> 01:25:27,831
So hopefully, fingers crossed,
tomorrow morning, we leave Earth.

1420
01:25:31,167 --> 01:25:33,461
(BIRDS SQUAWKING)

1421
01:25:36,506 --> 01:25:37,590
MALE VOICE 1: (OVER RADIO)
NASA CE.

1422
01:25:37,674 --> 01:25:39,092
MALE VOICE 2: (OVER RADIO)
NASA CE is go.

1423
01:25:39,551 --> 01:25:42,137
-MALE VOICE 1: (OVER RADIO) SMA.
-MALE VOICE 3: (OVER RADIO) SMA is go.

1424
01:25:42,470 --> 01:25:43,721
MALE VOICE 1: (OVER RADIO) SMD.

1425
01:25:43,805 --> 01:25:46,516
CHRISTIAN: As soon as that spacecraft
leaves the planet,

1426
01:25:47,016 --> 01:25:50,145
this Earth, I think
that's really when it's gonna set in.

1427
01:25:50,228 --> 01:25:52,230
-MALE VOICE 4: (OVER RADIO) Go Atlas.
-MALE VOICE 5: (OVER RADIO) Go Centaur.

1428
01:25:52,438 --> 01:25:53,815
MALE VOICE 6: (OVER RADIO) Go Mars 2020.

1429
01:25:54,399 --> 01:25:56,609
BRIANNA: That's all I wanna do
is watch it take off

1430
01:25:56,693 --> 01:25:59,946
and do exactly what it's been made for.

1431
01:26:00,238 --> 01:26:01,614
MALE VOICE 1: (OVER RADIO)
Launch Director.

1432
01:26:01,698 --> 01:26:02,824
LAUNCH DIRECTOR: (OVER RADIO)
LD is go

1433
01:26:02,907 --> 01:26:04,075
and you have permission to launch.

1434
01:26:04,159 --> 01:26:07,078
IVAN: Man, mind blowing!
This is to me like a dream.

1435
01:26:07,203 --> 01:26:09,414
That I'm part of this team.

1436
01:26:09,873 --> 01:26:11,499
MALE VOICE 1: (OVER RADIO)
Proceeding with the count.

1437
01:26:11,708 --> 01:26:15,086
ALC verified T-0-set for 1150 Zulu.

1438
01:26:15,211 --> 01:26:17,672
MICHAEL: Now it's on that rocket,
the countdown is happening,

1439
01:26:17,755 --> 01:26:19,340
and you can't do a thing about it.

1440
01:26:19,424 --> 01:26:22,802
MALE VOICE 1: (OVER RADIO)
Eight, seven, six, five, four.

1441
01:26:22,886 --> 01:26:24,679
MICHAEL: Crossing your fingers
going, "Don't blow up!"

1442
01:26:24,762 --> 01:26:27,724
MALE VOICE 1: (OVER RADIO)
Engine ignition, two, one, zero.

1443
01:26:28,892 --> 01:26:33,563
Release, and liftoff...
as the countdown to Mars continues.

1444
01:26:33,688 --> 01:26:36,941
JIM: I can't tell you the feeling
that you get

1445
01:26:37,025 --> 01:26:39,235
when you see that rocket light up.

1446
01:26:40,069 --> 01:26:41,863
(RUMBLING)

1447
01:26:43,281 --> 01:26:47,869
JENNA: That's something that we did,
that's something we created, and it's...

1448
01:26:48,494 --> 01:26:50,914
it's like nothing else to be part of that.

1449
01:26:54,292 --> 01:26:57,712
SETH: You hear about that Mars rover,
that's something that I built.

1450
01:26:59,631 --> 01:27:03,009
PATRICIA: Hey, I worked on that.
You know, I had a hand in that.

1451
01:27:03,259 --> 01:27:04,886
MALE VOICE 1: (OVER RADIO)
And Atlas TU has gone

1452
01:27:04,969 --> 01:27:06,054
to closed loop control.

1453
01:27:06,137 --> 01:27:08,431
PASAN: Everybody touches it
and a little bit of their soul

1454
01:27:08,514 --> 01:27:09,474
goes into it.

1455
01:27:09,557 --> 01:27:11,267
MALE VOICE 1: (OVER RADIO)
Coming up on 30 seconds into flight

1456
01:27:11,351 --> 01:27:14,020
the RD-180 is throttling down
as expected, engine response...

1457
01:27:14,103 --> 01:27:17,732
DELLON: You see it launching...
and then the sound is hitting you.

1458
01:27:18,983 --> 01:27:21,319
And you're realizing
that this thing is going.

1459
01:27:21,778 --> 01:27:23,321
-MALE VOICE 1: There it is!
-MALE VOICE 2: There it is!

1460
01:27:23,404 --> 01:27:24,989
-FEMALE VOICE: Yeah.
-ALL: Whoo!

1461
01:27:25,073 --> 01:27:27,492
-MALE VOICE 3: Yeah! Whoo!
-MALE VOICE 4: All right!

1462
01:27:27,659 --> 01:27:31,162
-(RUMBLING)
-Wow, listen to that.

1463
01:27:31,663 --> 01:27:34,332
It's just incredible that
it was here one day and now,

1464
01:27:34,415 --> 01:27:35,416
(LAUGHS) ...now it's gone!

1465
01:27:35,500 --> 01:27:38,503
FEMALE VOICE: And now it's gone!
Your baby... your baby is gone!

1466
01:27:39,003 --> 01:27:40,004
Jesus.

1467
01:27:43,258 --> 01:27:48,096
LACK: You devote your entire life to this,
you know, years of it,

1468
01:27:48,263 --> 01:27:52,141
and all of a sudden, it's gone.

1469
01:27:53,768 --> 01:27:55,687
MALE VOICE: (OVER RADIO)
Burnout pressure signatures look good.

1470
01:27:55,770 --> 01:27:57,939
Standing by for SRV jettison shortly.

1471
01:28:00,692 --> 01:28:03,236
LACK: We're trying to branch out
into the universe,

1472
01:28:03,319 --> 01:28:06,447
and this is one of those steps.

1473
01:28:06,531 --> 01:28:08,199
MALE VOICE 1: (OVER RADIO)
The vehicle is 50 miles

1474
01:28:08,283 --> 01:28:10,118
in altitude, 85 miles.

1475
01:28:10,201 --> 01:28:13,037
LACK: It's time for it to do
what it's supposed to do.



