Mars Landing on Kinect NASA and Microsoft announced a new Kinect-based game that tracks your movement to safely land the Curiosity rover. NASA TV

NASA's newest Mars rover, Curiosity, is just a few weeks away from its nail-biting landing, soaring to the surface and dropping via hovercrane. A new Kinect-based game unveiled today lets you land it yourself, using your own movement to maneuver Curiosity through the landing called "seven minutes of terror."

The game looks very much like the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's own visualization of Curiosity's planned descent, which is by far the most complex robotic landing ever attempted, let alone on another planet. It's a long way from Lunar Lander, in other words.

The Mars Science Laboratory will arrive at Mars on the late evening of Aug. 5 into the early morning of Aug. 6, careening into the atmosphere at 13,000 MPH. During the descent, it will shed its heat shield and deploy a parachute capable of surviving supersonic speeds. Once it's about 500 feet above the surface, the fun begins — rocket engines fire up to slow it down, gently lowering the Curiosity rover onto the surface. Once its wheels touch the ground, the hovercraft snips its umbilical cord and flies away to a crash landing.

In the Kinect version of this terrifying descent, you have to move your hands, arms and torso to control the rover's speed, angle of descent and more. It's tricky to get all the parameters right, according to Jeff Norris, manager of planning and execution systems at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. If you think it's hard, just remember: The rover will do this all on its own.

Download the game here for free. And stay tuned for PopSci's coverage of the real thing!

Landing With Kinect:  NASA TV

5 Comments

I do not own a kinect.

I really hope their is video of much of the landing. If it comes late, I understand that. I just really like to see a Mars landing, simuliar to those NASA Booster videos taking off and decent into the ocean. Those are great videos!

I hope it works on the real thing, believe me a lot of us have been waiting about ten years for Curiosity to land on Mars.

I proposed a much simpler way to land Curiosity at the 2007 Mars Society conference using the SkyClimber. It uses more parachutes and a recoil climbing device to lower the rovers speed of descent before impact. I did all the math and I'm sure it would have worked better than the SkyCrane. Here is where you can find my original presentation.

http://shineinnovations.com/5512.html

Ron Bennett

rlb2,
Your proposal is neat and interesting!! What does you lander have a gatling gun on it? Are you expecting trouble from the Martian creature folk? LOL

Being a robot, I thought you might like that. The military robotic rover automatic landing device was developed for domestic robotic warfare, still looking to make money off of it got a patent pending on the SkyClimber landing device.

Ron Bennett

sounds like fun



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