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Factory Spec DPA Is Out of this World

Stock Build DPA 4006 Microphone Withstands The Rigours Of Space Travel To Capture Audio From The Surface Of Mars

By

25 February 2021

NASA’s Mars Perseverance Rover touched down on the Red Planet last week, with DPA Microphones along for the historic ride. Outfitted with DPA’s 4006 Omnidirectional Microphone, MMA-A Digital Audio Interface and MMP-G Modular Active Cable, the rover provided the first sounds from the surface of Mars.

After being put through vigorous testing by NASA scientists, the DPA equipment, affixed to the Mars “Perseverance” Rover, launched into space aboard the Atlas V-541 rocket in July 2020. Over the past seven months, the DPA equipment has faced pressure changes while leaving Earth’s atmosphere and again when entering the Martian surface, and extreme temperatures — as low as -100 Celsius/-148 Fahrenheit — on Mars. Additionally, the DPA gear has endured the massive vibrations caused by the rocket launch and subsequent landing on Mars.

“It is an honor to have been chosen for this space mission, and we are so pleased by the results,” says DPA Product Manager René Mørch. “Everything about the mission — from the launch to the landing — is hostile insofar as a microphone is generally concerned. It’s very exciting to know that DPA was able to record something from so many millions of miles away, and have the sound travel back to us so quickly. We are proud to have worked with NASA for such a historic and important mission. To have been able to deliver audio from the surface of Mars is truly a crowning achievement.”

After the rover touched down on the Red Planet, audio and video files were recorded from the surface and transmitted to NASA’s base station. As yet another example of the close collaboration between DPA and NASA, the initial audio files were sent to DPA’s engineering team for processing, and subsequently back to NASA for final analyzing and publishing. Following several days of review, the team was pleased not only to find that the durability of the DPA mic allowed it to withstand space travel, but also that the audio captured was as incredible as expected.

Though other missions to Mars have provided seismic soundwaves from the planet, this expedition marks the first time the world has experienced a true audio capture of its surface. With heavy winds, thin air pressure and extremely low temperatures of the highest concerns, the ruggedness and durability of the DPA equipment has once again proven its worth on this mission.

While one might expect equipment aboard a space mission to be unique and purpose-built for interplanetary travel, the DPA gear on the Mars Perserverance Rover features off-the-shelf components. Though the layout of the microphone amplifier and chassis of the MMA-A each required modifications in order to be affixed to the rover, the mechanics of the devices are exactly the same as those found in every DPA solution.

DPA Microphones: dpamicrophones.com

Australian Distributor: ambertech.com.au

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Issue 94