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As a child, Lauren DuCharme wondered if there is life beyond Earth. She not only reached for the stars, but also helped land a spacecraft on Mars to find out.
\nThe Cal State Fullerton alumna, a systems flight engineer for NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, is part of the team of engineers, software developers and scientists working on the historic Mars 2020 Perseverance rover mission. The rover is designed to search for signs of past life on the red planet, and collect soil and rock samples that will eventually be returned to Earth.
\nThe rover, affectionately known as “Percy” to her team, touched down safely in Jezero Crater on Feb. 18, following a nearly seven-month, 292.5-million-mile journey to Mars.
\n“When I heard mission control shout out ‘touchdown confirmed!’ I felt this wave of relief and joy, and started bawling,” shares DuCharme, a Class of 2015 mechanical engineering graduate.
\n“I’ve dreamed of landing a spacecraft on another planet since I was a little girl — and I had finally done it. As soon as my husband saw me cheer, he ran into the kitchen to get a bottle of champagne and he let me pop the cork to celebrate.”
\nThe spectacular landing sparked a flood of phone calls, text messages, social media messages and emails from DuCharme’s friends and family congratulating her and the rest of the NASA and Jet Propulsion Laboratory teams.
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