maxon to present NASA Mars missions at Magnetics in Space 2025

A look behind the drive system technology onboard NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover and Ingenuity drone will be presented to delegates at Magnetics in Space 2025.

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The UK Magnetics Society event, taking place on 12 February at the Satellite Applications Catapult in Oxfordshire, includes a special presentation by Andrew Gibson, maxon’s UK lead for space & aerospace applications.

In ‘25 Years of Exploration on Mars and Beyond’, Andrew will explain the role of electric motor technology used throughout the history of NASA’s Mars missions. 

The presentation will focus on the current
mission to the Red Planet, which has the objective of collecting Martian soil samples for research into signs of ancient microbial life. 

The audience of UK Magnetics Society members will include design engineers as well as academic engineers and scientists across applications involving magnetics. Electromagnetic flux flow is essential to the operation of electric motors, and the presentation will explore motor design for space applications.

Onboard NASA’s
Perseverance rover, electric motors and gearheads control the drill, required to access the sample material, as well as the sample handling system inside the rover. NASA is currently investigating the process to return the samples to Earth, planned for 2026.

Electric motors are also used within NASA’s landmark Ingenuity drone in the control of the swashplate, responsible for the pitch of the rotors. Ingenuity made history
as the first drone ever to be used on another planet. 

Planned to make five flights, the durability of the drone enabled it to make 72 flights over nearly three years of operation.

Gibson will explain how maxon worked with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in the design and manufacture of the drive systems. As well as the control precision required by NASA, the drive systems must be
sufficiently durable to endure the launch, deployment, and life in the Martian environment. 

Gibson will elaborate on the design that has enabled operation in a vacuum, resistance to radiation, as well as the demands on high torque density, low mass, and high efficiency.

Gibson is a headline speaker alongside fellow speakers from the British Geological Survey, UK academics, and leading organisations in space exploration. 

To find out more about the event and to register, visit the website.

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