ExoMars test rover Amalia drives off the landing platform
A long-awaited moment in the ExoMars mission will be when ESA’s Rosalind Franklin rover leaves the landing platform, Kazachok, and drives onto the martian soil for the first time. The egress is a carefully choreographed move that engineers are rehearsing on Earth.
Rosalind’s twin on Earth, known as Amalia, has successfully left the platform in a Mars terrain simulator at the ALTEC premises in Turin. The test model borrows its name from renowned astrophysicist Professor Amalia Ercoli Finzi. Amalia was the first woman to graduate in aeronautical engineering in Italy, and she strongly pushed for the development of the ExoMars drill already 20 years ago.
While the driving during these exercises takes about 15 minutes, the whole egress is a long and crucial operation that will last a few martian days. After landing, the rover will be busy for over a week unfolding its wheels and deploying the mast, among other checkouts.
The landing platform has two exit ramps: one at the front and another on
1 view
1
0
3 years ago 00:01:58 1
ExoMars test rover Amalia drives off the landing platform
3 years ago 00:01:41 5
ExoMars Test Rover Amalia Drives off the Landing Platform
3 years ago 00:01:50 1
Double drop test success
3 years ago 00:06:07 1
ExoMars parachute drop tests important step for future rover
3 years ago 00:00:56 1
ExoMars parachute high-altitude drop test
3 years ago 00:00:39 2
Roving in the Mars Terrain Simulator
4 years ago 00:00:54 1
ExoMars Parachute Extraction Tests – Arescosmo
4 years ago 00:00:46 1
ExoMars Parachute Extraction Tests – Airborne Systems
4 years ago 00:00:37 2
ExoMars spacecraft composite in dynamic balancing test
4 years ago 00:00:48 1
ExoMars parachute extraction tests
4 years ago 00:02:44 1
ExoMars low-altitude parachute drop test
5 years ago 00:04:53 1
Leben auf dem Mars: Mission “ExoMars” wegen Corona dieses Jahr geplatzt!