NASA's Perseverance rover to drill into Mars using part made on Vancouver Island - Action News
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British Columbia

NASA's Perseverance rover to drill into Mars using part made on Vancouver Island

A Vancouver Island company has provided a drill bit that will be used to pierce the surface of the red planet and collect core samples that will be brought back to earth.

Victoria company supplies drill bit that will collect core samples from the red planet

This artist's concept art depicts NASA's Perseverance rover on the surface of Mars. (NASA/JPL-Caltech)

When thePerseverance rover successfully landed on Mars last month, it arrived with a B.C.-made tool in its figurative tool belt.

The six-wheeled, plutonium-powered U.S. rover landed on the red planet on Feb. 18, with a mandate to drill down and collect tiny geological specimens that will be returned to NASA in about 2031. That drilling will be done using a drill bit tip designed and manufactured by a company based in Langford, B.C.

"It has great wear and fractureresistance so it is perfect for a Mars application," saidRon Sivorat,business director forKennametal Inc., during an interview on CBC's All Points West.

The drill bit tip is made from K92-grade tungsten carbide blanks, which Sivoratsaid areone of the toughest grades used for drilling here on earth and he is confident it will be good enough forMars.

Mars rover Perseverance successfully arrives at Red Planet

4 years ago
Duration 2:45
NASA successfully landed the Perseverance rover on Mars on Feb. 18. This video shows highlights of landing sequence narrated by Mission Control.

According to Sivorat, the company has had a relationship withNASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratorysince 2014, when the space agency first began ordering and testing Kennametal Inc. drill bit tips. In 2018, the company learned NASA wanted to work with itto buildabitfor Perseverance.

Sivorat said staff built thedrill bit to NASA's specifications and then sent it to the agency who finessed it somewhat for its Mars mission.

When Perseverance landed safely on the fourth planet from the sun, it was an exciting moment forKennametal Inc. employees, many of whom watched the landing online and are continuingto check onPerservance'sdaily progress updates.

"We know that we are going to be part of,in one way or another, an historical event that will be remembered for many years to come," saidSivorat.

Sivorat said he expects the drill bit built in B.C. to start penetrating the surface of Mars in the next couple of weeks.

And B.C. is not the only Canadian province with a connection to Perseverance.

Canadian Photonic Labs, based inMinnedosa, Man., manufactured a high-speedand highly-durable camera that played an instrumental role in landing the rover.

The Manitoba company's relationship with NASA dates back roughly 15 years, he said butmuch of the work that's happened in that time has been cloaked in secrecy.

With files from All Points West