Indian-American Scientist Swati Mohan Played Key Role In Nasa Mars Rover Landing
An Indian-American scientist, Swati Mohan, played a pivotal role in landing
NASA's historic Perseverance rover on the Martian surface on Friday. She leads
the guidance, navigation, and control operations of the US space agency's Mars
2020 mission.
Mohan was also the first to confirm that the rover had successfully touched
down on the Martian surface after surviving a particularly tricky plunge
through the atmosphere of the Red Planet.
"Touchdown confirmed! Perseverance safely on the surface of Mars, ready to
begin seeking signs of past life," flight controller Mohan announced,
prompting her colleagues at NASA to fist-bump and break into celebrations.
Touchdown confirmed. The #CountdownToMars is complete, but the mission is just beginning. pic.twitter.com/UvOyXQhhN9
— NASA (@NASA) February 18, 2021
Mohan emigrated from India to the US when she was only a year old. She said
during the cruise phase heading towards Mars that their job was to figure out
how the spacecraft was oriented, and make sure it is pointed correctly in
space -- "solar arrays to the sun, antenna to Earth, and manoeuvre the
spacecraft to get it where we want to go."
She said during the "seven minutes of terror" leading to the entry, descent,
and landing on Mars, GN&C determines the position of the spacecraft and
commands the manoeuvres to help it land safely.
"I am responsible for the training of the GN&C team, scheduling the
mission control staffing for GN&C, as well as the policies/procedures the
GN&C uses in the mission control room," Mohan noted.
Raised in the Northern Virginia-Washington DC metro area, she completed her
bachelor's degree from Cornell University in Mechanical & Aerospace
Engineering, and her MS And PhD from Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT) in Aeronautics/Astronautics.
Mohan says she got interested in space after watching the popular TV show Star
Trek when she was 9.
"Seeing the beautiful depictions of the new regions of the universe that they
were exploring. I remember thinking 'I want to do that. I want to find new and
beautiful places in the universe.' The vastness of space holds so much
knowledge that we have only begun to learn," she had told NASA.
Mohan noted that her passion for space increased further when she took her
first physics class at the age of 16.
Over the course of her career with NASA, Mohan has worked on the Cassini
mission to Saturn and GRAIL -- a pair of formation flown spacecraft to the
Moon, and has been a mainstay with the Mars 2020 mission since its beginning
in 2013.
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