Here’s a quick update on Mars 2020, focusing on Perseverance and the ongoing Mars sample return effort.
Direct answer
- Perseverance (Mars 2020) landed in February 2021 and has since been collecting rock and soil samples for potential return to Earth, a key step in the broader Mars sample return campaign.
Key points
- Mission goals: Search for signs of ancient life, characterize Mars’ geology and climate, and collect samples for possible return to Earth in cooperation with international partners. Perseverance also caches samples at multiple locations for potential future retrieval by a dedicated fetch rover mission.
- Status as of 2026: The rover continues to operate on Mars, conducting sample collection, caching, and science investigations. The overall Mars sample return architecture involves multiple missions and international collaboration to retrieve cached samples and bring them to Earth for in-depth analysis.
- Recent context: Advances include successful sample caching, progress in planning the fetch-and-return mission, and ongoing scientific findings about Mars’ past habitability and geological history.
What to look for next
- Updates on: number of cached samples, planned fetch mission timelines, and any new science findings from Perseverance and its surroundings.
- Official sources to monitor: NASA Mars 2020 / Perseverance mission pages, and NASA’s Mars Sample Return program updates.
Illustration
- A simple mental model: Perseverance acts as a field geologist on Mars, carefully placing specimen tubes (samples) in surface caches across a planned route, much like leaving trail markers for a future expedition to collect and return to Earth.
If you’d like, I can pull the latest press releases and summarize the most recent milestones with citations.