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NASA’s Mars Perseverance has a rock scale that can be ridden

Flight one: April 19, 2021 with vertical take-off up to 9.8 feet, fixed landing and landing

Flight Two: April 22, 2021 with a vertical takeoff of up to 16 feet, turn, then move west for 14 feet before returning and landing

Flight three: April 25, 2021 with vertical take-off up to 16 feet, hovering, moving north for 328 feet at an air speed of 2 m / s before returning to landing

Fourth flight: April 30, 2021 with vertical take-off up to 16 feet, hovering, moving south 873 feet at 3.5 m / s before returning to landing

Flight five: May 7, 2021 with vertical takeoff to 33 feet, turn, move south 423 feet at 3.5 m / s before landing at this new location

Flight six: May 22, 2021 with a vertical takeoff of 33 feet, turn, shift southwest 492 feet at 9 mph, travel 49 feet south, travel 164 feet before returning to land

Flight seven: June 8, 2021 with a vertical takeoff of 33 feet, hovering, changing 348 feet at 9 miles per hour, landing at D airport

Flight eight: June 21, 2021 with vertical takeoff, turn, southwest shift 520 feet, landing at Airport E at 438 feet from Permanence

Flight nine: July 5, 2021 with a record length of 2050 feet southwest over a future research site at 16 feet per second.

Flight ten: July 24, 2021 with a record altitude of 40 feet (12 meters) above Raised Ridges to Airfield G. Flight duration 165.4 seconds.

Flight Eleven: August 5, 2021, flying 1,250 feet for 130 seconds in preparation for a series of reconnaissance missions for the Perseverance rover.

Flight Twelve: August 16, 2021, flying 1,476 feet in 169 seconds, ascending 32.8 feet in the air over the Southern Sith area of ​​Mars.

Flight thirteen: September 5, 2021, with a flight of 690 feet in 160.5 seconds, ascending 26 feet above a specific ridge line over the South Seita region of Mars.

Fourteenth flight: October 25, 2021, flying a 6.5-foot (2-meter) “short jump” to test higher-speed settings. He flew for 23 seconds at 1 mile per hour at an altitude of 16 feet (5 m).

Flight fifteen: November 6, 2021, flying back to its original landing site. He flew for a total of 128 seconds at approximately 11 miles per hour.

Flight sixteen: November 20, 2021, traveling 381 feet (116 meters) in a total of 108 seconds at approximately 3 miles per hour.

Flight seventeen: December 5, 2021, with a flight back to the Wright Brothers field at the landing site of Octavia E. Butler. He flew 614 feet (187 meters) in a total of 117 seconds at approximately 6 miles per hour.

Flight Eighteen: December 15, 2021, traveling 755 feet (230 meters) for a total of 124.3 seconds at approximately 5 miles per hour.

Flight nineteen: February 7, 2022, traveling 207 feet (63 meters) in a total of 99.8 seconds at approximately 2 miles per hour.

Flight Twenty: February 25, 2022, traveling 1,283 feet (391 meters) in a total of 130.3 seconds at approximately 10 mph.

Flight twenty-one: March 11, 2022, traveling 1,214 feet (370 meters) in a total of 129.2 seconds at approximately 8 miles per hour.

Flight twenty-two: March 19, 2022, traveling 223 feet (68 meters) in a total of 101.4 seconds at approximately 2.2 miles per hour.

Flight twenty-three: March 23, 2022, traveling 1,175 feet (358 meters) in a total of 129.1 seconds at approximately 8.9 miles per hour.

Flight twenty-four: April 3, 2022, traveling 154 feet (47 meters) for a total of 69.5 seconds at approximately 3.2 miles per hour.

Flight twenty-five: April 8, 2022, traveling 2,310 feet (704 meters) in a total of 161.3 seconds at approximately 12.3 miles per hour.

Flight Twenty-Six: April 19, 2022, traveling 1,181 feet (360 meters) in a total of 159 seconds at approximately 8.5 miles per hour.

Flight Twenty-seven: April 23, 2022, traveling 1,007 feet (307 meters) in a total of 152.9 seconds at approximately 6.7 miles per hour.

Flight Twenty-Eight: April 29, 2022, traveling 1,371 feet (418 meters) in a total of 152.4 seconds at approximately 8.1 miles per hour.