After a month-long journey, the aircraft InSight NASA's rover is ready to land on Mars. You can watch the landing at 9 pm Greek time.
NASA provides live coverage of landing on November 26 from 9 p.m. (actual landing starts at 9:40 p.m.) on almost all channels video. It certainly offers a lot more options than the Curiosity landing in 2012.
The usual channels are Youtube, where you can watch the whole process without comments, at Twitch (and in two first there will be 360-degree video) and on Facebook .
There will also be promotional places around the world. In the USA, you can see the landing in places like Times Square, the American Museum of Natural History, the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, the Space Center of Houston and the California Science Center of LA.
If all goes well According to the plan, some procedures are scheduled to take place in just a few minutes. InSight should technically land at 9:54 p.m., but will not send confirmation until 10:01 p.m. How fast you get details will depend on two cubesats (Mars Cube One) making a flyby and retransmitting InSight data.
Cubesats are two experimental microsatellitesterms that traveled with InSight, flying behind it. They are the size of a briefcase and weigh 13,5 kg each. They will be tested for the first time on another planet and will act as an alternative and faster relay of InSight's radio signals to Earth, bypassing the large satellite spacecraft that have been orbiting Mars for years. So NASA will be able to know within minutes (rather than hours) how the landing went.
But beyond that, you definitely need to be patient. To find out if InSight solar panels have been developed, you will have to wait until 3:35 a.m. the next day and the first image may take up to a day to reach us.
InSight is a robotic geological laboratory designed to analyze earthquakes on Mars, its tectonic structure and the composition of its interior.