<p>NASA has delayed by at least several days the first flight of its mini-helicopter on Mars after a possible tech issue emerged while testing its rotors, the US space agency said Saturday.</p>.<p>Ingenuity's trip, which is to be the first-ever powered, controlled flight on another planet, was set for Sunday but is now on hold until at least April 14.</p>.<p>A high-speed test of the four-pound (1.8 kilogram) helicopter's rotors on Friday ended earlier than expected due to an alert of a potential issue.</p>.<p>"The helicopter team is reviewing telemetry to diagnose and understand the issue," NASA said in a statement. "Following that, they will reschedule the full-speed test."</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/nasas-ingenuity-helicopter-survives-first-night-alone-on-mars-970991.html">NASA's Ingenuity helicopter survives first night alone on Mars</a></strong></p>.<p>NASA noted the copter is "safe and healthy" and had sent information back to Earth.</p>.<p>Initially the plan for Sunday was to have Ingenuity fly for 30 seconds to take a picture of the Perseverance rover, which touched down on Mars on February 18 with the helicopter attached to its underside.</p>.<p>NASA calls the unprecedented helicopter operation highly risky, but says it could reap invaluable data about the conditions on Mars.</p>.<p>The flight is a true challenge because the air on Mars is so thin -- less than one percent of the pressure of Earth's atmosphere.</p>.<p>This means Ingenuity must spin its rotor blades much faster than a helicopter needs to do on Earth in order to fly.</p>.<p>After the flight, Ingenuity will send Perseverance technical data on what it has done, and that information will be transmitted back to Earth.</p>.<p>This will include a black and white photo of the Martian surface that Ingenuity is programmed to snap while flying.</p>.<p>A day later, once its batteries have charged up again, Ingenuity is to transmit another photo -- in color, of the Martian horizon, taken with a different camera.</p>.<p>If the flight is a success, NASA plans another no more than four days later. It plans as many as five altogether, each successively more difficult, over the course of a month.</p>.<p>NASA hopes to make the helicopter rise five meters (16 feet) and then move laterally.</p>.<p>The mission is be the equivalent on Mars of the first powered flight on Earth -- by the Wright brothers in 1903 in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. A piece of fabric from that plane has been tucked inside Ingenuity in honor of that feat.</p>
<p>NASA has delayed by at least several days the first flight of its mini-helicopter on Mars after a possible tech issue emerged while testing its rotors, the US space agency said Saturday.</p>.<p>Ingenuity's trip, which is to be the first-ever powered, controlled flight on another planet, was set for Sunday but is now on hold until at least April 14.</p>.<p>A high-speed test of the four-pound (1.8 kilogram) helicopter's rotors on Friday ended earlier than expected due to an alert of a potential issue.</p>.<p>"The helicopter team is reviewing telemetry to diagnose and understand the issue," NASA said in a statement. "Following that, they will reschedule the full-speed test."</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/science-and-environment/nasas-ingenuity-helicopter-survives-first-night-alone-on-mars-970991.html">NASA's Ingenuity helicopter survives first night alone on Mars</a></strong></p>.<p>NASA noted the copter is "safe and healthy" and had sent information back to Earth.</p>.<p>Initially the plan for Sunday was to have Ingenuity fly for 30 seconds to take a picture of the Perseverance rover, which touched down on Mars on February 18 with the helicopter attached to its underside.</p>.<p>NASA calls the unprecedented helicopter operation highly risky, but says it could reap invaluable data about the conditions on Mars.</p>.<p>The flight is a true challenge because the air on Mars is so thin -- less than one percent of the pressure of Earth's atmosphere.</p>.<p>This means Ingenuity must spin its rotor blades much faster than a helicopter needs to do on Earth in order to fly.</p>.<p>After the flight, Ingenuity will send Perseverance technical data on what it has done, and that information will be transmitted back to Earth.</p>.<p>This will include a black and white photo of the Martian surface that Ingenuity is programmed to snap while flying.</p>.<p>A day later, once its batteries have charged up again, Ingenuity is to transmit another photo -- in color, of the Martian horizon, taken with a different camera.</p>.<p>If the flight is a success, NASA plans another no more than four days later. It plans as many as five altogether, each successively more difficult, over the course of a month.</p>.<p>NASA hopes to make the helicopter rise five meters (16 feet) and then move laterally.</p>.<p>The mission is be the equivalent on Mars of the first powered flight on Earth -- by the Wright brothers in 1903 in Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. A piece of fabric from that plane has been tucked inside Ingenuity in honor of that feat.</p>