【define eroticizing】
With its plan to return samples from Mars in jeopardy,define eroticizing NASA is now making a desperate plea for outside help to save the costly and complex mission.
NASA administrator Bill Nelson and the agency's head of science, Nikki Fox, announced Monday they will seek suggestions from the greater space industry with a formal request for ideas. The agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which has been overseeing the mission from California, has already laid off about 530 employees — about 8 percent of its workforce — and 40 contractors in the face of budget constraints.
NASA will solicit new concept proposals for the mission that could reduce spending and hasten the timeline. The agency is also asking other NASA campuses to weigh in. By the fall, they hope to have some new ideas to consider.
You May Also Like
When asked what happens if there aren't any practical solutions, administrator Bill Nelson quipped, "Better than not to try."
"I suspect if folks at NASA and our contractors and our centers and JPL put their minds to it, these are folks who can figure out rather difficult things," he said during a call with reporters.
SEE ALSO: The surprising reason a Mars rover just started dropping samples
Mars Sample Return, a complex mission to bring rocks and dirt back from the Red Planet, has been at a crossroads since last year. The mission's swelling costs have led to layoffs and warnings of cancellation from Congress.
Independent reviews have found that the mission would likely cost upward of $11 billion to achieve by the 2030s — or would require delays that would set back the return to at least 2040. That spending projection is more than 50 percent higher than a range recommended by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine.
But the nonpartisan Planetary Society has said the program is too important for NASA to scrap.
"Do the science, do it now, and do it with balance," wrote Casey Dreier, the group's senior space policy adviser.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
NASA's Perseverance rover, a car-size lab on six wheels, has been collecting samples from the Jezero crater since 2021 with the hope they can be returned to Earth for scientific scrutiny.
Over the course of its exploration, Perseverance has been drilling into rocks and filling pairs of sample tubes so that each has a backup supply. The plan has been for the rover to eventually deliver the samples to a robotic lander equipped with a rocket to bring them back for study.
Related Stories
- The surprising reason a Mars rover just started dropping samples
- NASA rover finds clear evidence of ancient waves, yes waves, on Mars
- How Mars rovers could explore vast uncharted caves
- An enormous Martian cloud returns every spring. Scientists found out why.
- NASA discovered bacteria that wouldn't die. Now it's boosting sunscreen.
"Better than not to try."

If Perseverance couldn't make the transfers, Plan B would involve recovering the duplicate tubes from the ground where the rover is intentionally dropping them. In that scenario, drones similar to the recently deceased Ingenuity helicopter would pick them up and fly them to a lander.
Once the 30-or-so sample tubes had left Mars on the rocket, another spacecraft orbiting the Red Planet would bring them some 140 million miles back to Earth, according to the original plan. (With both planets constantly moving, their exact distance is always changing.)

NASA sent Perseverance to the crater because it's a place where planetary scientists think microscopic organisms — a.k.a. life — might have potentially existed long ago. The region is thought to be a dried delta, where water once emptied from a river into a lake. The remaining rocks may contain relics or clues about ancient life forms, if there ever were any.
The mission, a partnership with the European Space Agency, would not only include the first attempt to bring back dust and dirt from another full-fledged planet but also the first launch from the surface of another planet. Recovering the samples would fulfill one of the highest priorities of the scientific community for the next decade.
"This is not just a grab-a-rock mission," Fox said. "These are very carefully, scientifically curated, and selected samples [from] a very diverse set of locations."
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
Trump is feeling really, really under
2025-06-26 21:57Book as Enemy by Adania Shibli
2025-06-26 21:40The Nine Ways: On the Enneagram by Jacob Rubin
2025-06-26 20:30Keeping Hope Alive
2025-06-26 20:23Popular Posts
Hearing from Helen Vendler by Christopher Bollas
2025-06-26 21:31At the Five Hundred Ponies Sale by Alyse Burnside
2025-06-26 21:16Featured Posts
Best Sony deal: Save $100 on WH
2025-06-26 22:30I Got Snipped: Notes after a Vasectomy by Joseph Earl Thomas
2025-06-26 21:22Story Time by Cynthia Zarin
2025-06-26 21:09Rented Horrors by Kathleen Alcott
2025-06-26 20:22Amazon requires sellers to use more efficient packaging, or pay up
2025-06-26 20:11Popular Articles
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for May 9, 2025
2025-06-26 21:35The ABCs of Gardening by Adrienne Raphel
2025-06-26 21:11Feral Goblin: Hospital Diary by Kate Riley
2025-06-26 20:44Best robot vacuum deal: Save $320 on Shark Robot Vacuum and Mop
2025-06-26 19:50Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (766)
Star Sky Information Network
Best Garmin deal: Save over $100 on Garmin Forerunner 955
2025-06-26 22:28Opportunity Information Network
Bolaño in Girona: A Friendship by Javier Cercas
2025-06-26 22:12Progress Information Network
Death Is Very Close: A Champagne Reception for Philippe Petit by Patrick McGraw
2025-06-26 22:04Inspiration Information Network
The American Sentence: On Gertrude Stein’s Melanctha by Edwin Frank
2025-06-26 20:53Exciting Information Network
The Anatomy of Liberal Melancholy
2025-06-26 19:52