HomeNewsTrendsHumans are yet to land on Mars but we've dumped over 7,000 kg of trash on it

Humans are yet to land on Mars but we've dumped over 7,000 kg of trash on it

Today, the main concern scientists have about trash on Mars is the risk it poses to current and future missions.

September 26, 2022 / 17:46 IST
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This bundle of debris was first spotted July 12 by the rover's front left hazard avoidance camera -- but when Perseverance returned to the same spot four days later, it was gone.
This bundle of debris was first spotted July 12 by the rover's front left hazard avoidance camera -- but when Perseverance returned to the same spot four days later, it was gone.

It has been more than 50 years that people have been exploring the surface of Mars and after 14 missions, while humans are yet to set foot on the Red Planet, 18 human-made objects have landed on it and left debris worth over 7,000 kg.

In mid-August 2022, NASA confirmed that the Mars rover Perseverance had spotted a piece of trash jettisoned during its landing, this time a tangled mess of netting. And this is not the first time scientists have found trash on Mars. That’s because there is a lot there.

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But where does the debris come from? It comes from three main sources: discarded hardware, inactive spacecraft and crashed spacecraft.

Every mission to the Martian surface requires a module that protects the spacecraft. This module includes a heat shield for when the craft passes through the planet’s atmosphere and a parachute and landing hardware so that it can land softly.