NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Center
is testing out a prototype of a flying wing aircraft called Prandtl-m,
which could be the 1st man-made vehicle to fly on Mars.
And it looks a lot like a large titanium boomerang.
The Prandtl-m will be made of fiberglass or carbon fiber and has a wingspan of 24 inches when deployed —
yet its prototype is lightweight at just under a pound.
Since Mars has
significantly less gravity than Earth, that means the Martian version of
the aircraft could weigh up to 2.6 pounds and still fly efficiently.
The Martian atmosphere is also much thinner than here on Earth, so NASA
will be conducting some high-altitude tests on the Prandtl-m to see if
it's fit to fly above our planetary neighbor.
Later this year, a balloon
will take the aircraft up to an altitude of 100,000 feet, where the air
is much thinner, to simulate what it would be like to fly in Martian
airspace.
Future tests will take the Prandtl-m even higher to 450,000
feet.
If these flights prove successful, the idea is to pack a
folded-up Prandtl-m inside the spacecraft that will carry the next
rover to the Red Planet in the early 2020s.
Once the rover mission
reaches Mars, the Prandtl-m will deploy over the planet, glide through
its atmosphere for 20 miles, and then land. NASA hopes to use this
flight time to scope out possible landing sites for a future human
mission to Mars
Unlike a boomerang, the Prandtl-m won’t be coming back
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