NASA confirmed in a blog post that it had successfully tested two Mars-bound rotor systems, achieving never-before-seen rotational speeds. In the tests, which took place at the historic 25-Foot Space Simulator at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), the rotor systems — one two-bladed and one three-bladed — reached rotor tip speeds of Mach 1.08 and Mach 0.98, respectively, before additional headwinds pushed them past the sound barrier for the first time ever. The rotors reached up to 3,750 rpm. For comparison, that is roughly 10 times faster than the rotor speeds of many modern helicopters.

These extreme speeds are necessary to generate enough lift in Mars’ ultra-thin atmosphere, which is only about 1% as dense as Earth’s. The rotors were jointly developed by NASA and AeroVironment as part of Project SkyFall, a proposed mission to deploy multiple airborne exploratory rotorcraft across Mars. The mission, currently targeted for December 2028, would transport three next-generation Mars helicopters aboard a spacecraft to the Red Planet. Once the spacecraft lands on Mars, the helicopters would deploy to different regions of the planet for independent exploration missions, using the landed spacecraft as a communications and operational base.

Testing the Next Generation of Mars Helicopter Rotor Blades – YouTube
Testing the Next Generation of Mars Helicopter Rotor Blades - YouTube

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