Perseverance Sends First Analysis of Martian Rock Samples

This NASA photo released on Feb 24 shows images from NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance rover of its new home in Jezero Crater on Feb 21 after touching down on the Red Planet on Feb 18. AFP
This NASA photo released on Feb 24 shows images from NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance rover of its new home in Jezero Crater on Feb 21 after touching down on the Red Planet on Feb 18. AFP
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Perseverance Sends First Analysis of Martian Rock Samples

This NASA photo released on Feb 24 shows images from NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance rover of its new home in Jezero Crater on Feb 21 after touching down on the Red Planet on Feb 18. AFP
This NASA photo released on Feb 24 shows images from NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance rover of its new home in Jezero Crater on Feb 21 after touching down on the Red Planet on Feb 18. AFP

The bundle of instruments known as SuperCam on board the Perseverance Mars rover has collected its first samples in the hunt for past life on the Red Planet, mission scientists said.

The return to Earth years from now of the rocks and soil it retrieves "will give scientists the Holy Grail of planetary exploration," Jean-Yves le Gall, president of France's National Center for Space Studies (CNES), which mostly built the mobile observatory, commented via a YouTube broadcast.

These "pieces of Mars", he said, may "finally answer this fascinating and fundamental question: was there ever life elsewhere than Earth?"

After seven months in space, NASA's Perseverance rover gently set down on Martian soil last month and sent back black-and-white images revealing the rocky fields of Jezero Crater, just north of the Mars equator.

"The critical component of this astrobiology mission is SuperCam," said Thomas Zurbuchen, deputy head of NASA's Science Mission Directorate.

Mounted on the rover's mast, the shoebox-sized gizmo is packed with spectrometers, a laser, and an audio recording device to analyze the chemistry, mineralogy and molecular composition of Mars' famously red surface.

SuperCam's laser can zap objects smaller than a pencil point from as far away as seven meters (20 feet), and enables the observation of spots beyond the reach of the rover's robotic arm.

"The laser is uniquely capable of remotely clearing away surface dust, giving all of its instruments a clear view of the targets," said Roger Wiens, an engineer at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) and SuperCam principal investigator.

The mission suffered a serious mishap before liftoff, revealed LANL's Scott Robinson, who said more than 500 engineers and scientists contributed to the project.



Shanghai Relocates More Than 280,000 People Due to Tropical Storm 

People use umbrellas and raincoats to shield themselves from heavy rain and high winds, after Tropical Storm Co-May made landfall in a nearby city, in Shanghai, China July 30, 2025. (Reuters)
People use umbrellas and raincoats to shield themselves from heavy rain and high winds, after Tropical Storm Co-May made landfall in a nearby city, in Shanghai, China July 30, 2025. (Reuters)
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Shanghai Relocates More Than 280,000 People Due to Tropical Storm 

People use umbrellas and raincoats to shield themselves from heavy rain and high winds, after Tropical Storm Co-May made landfall in a nearby city, in Shanghai, China July 30, 2025. (Reuters)
People use umbrellas and raincoats to shield themselves from heavy rain and high winds, after Tropical Storm Co-May made landfall in a nearby city, in Shanghai, China July 30, 2025. (Reuters)

Shanghai has relocated more than 280,000 people since Tuesday night as a safety precaution, China Central Television (CCTV) reported on Wednesday, in anticipation of heavy rainfall with the arrival of a tropical cyclone in eastern China.

Co-May made landfall as a tropical storm in the port city of Zhoushan in Zhejiang province in the early hours of Wednesday with maximum sustained wind speeds near its center of 23 meters per second (83 kph), Chinese state media reported.

While the winds ushered in by Co-May are weaker than those generated by typhoons, the Chinese financial hub and other cities in the Yangtze delta have taken no chances, cancelling flights and train services, suspending schools, and moving people away from areas considered risky.

Forecasters expect Co-May to make another landfall closer to Shanghai later on Wednesday.

Shanghai is rarely subject to direct hits from strong typhoons that generally make landfall further south in China.

The most significant typhoon in recent years that landed directly in Shanghai was Bebinca last year, the most powerful tropical cyclone to hit China's financial capital since 1949.