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One of the people that worked on the helicopter works out at my gym. He's a cool bean.
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> Ingenuity covered about 49 feet (15 m) of horizontal distance on Saturday's flight, which lasted 52 seconds. The helicopter has now traveled a total of 24,302 feet (7,407 m) and stayed aloft for 59.9 minutes on its 35 Mars sorties, according to the mission flight log

Makes so happy to see such impressive numbers coming from what at the time was little more than especulative exploration

If it were to fall from a height of 14m on Mars, it would reach a speed of 36km/h when hitting the ground after 2.74 seconds of free fall (let's ignore the thin Mars atmosphere). Gravity is 3.7m/s/s.

On Earth after falling from 14m (again, ignoring the atmosphere) you reach 59.6km/h on impact after a mere 1.69 seconds.

On the Moon it reaches 24.3km/h after 4.2 seconds. Gravity is 1.6m/s/s.

There is a very nice map of the mission.

https://mars.nasa.gov/maps/location/?mission=M20

If you go to layers you can turn on the helicopter flight path.

The only thing I was missing was a distance tool.

But while I was looking for that I did find two hidden tools which sort of work for distances.

drag the scale marker in the bottom left corner to get a rectangle widget you can place on the map.

click on the lat/log in the lower right side to cycle to easting/northing and relative east/north.

I never thought about it before but on mars a latitude/longitude(at the equator) is about 37 miles(60 km) vs roughly 70 miles(112 km) on earth.
One issue that plagued the mars rovers so far is the buildup of dust on the solar panels. Could the helicopter help by flying over the rover, thus blowing away the dust?
Perseverance (the rover) has its own "Gaseous Dust Removal Tool (GDRT)" that puffs compressed nitrogen to remove dust from samples before analyzing them, not sure if it can turn that back around on its own panels though...
I unsarcastically love the super-serious names military/space folks come up with for mundane things like a dust blower
Nope. They're not risking Ingenuity (a tech demo that works very well) crashing into Perseverance. Also: no need, Perseverance doesn't have solar panels but an Radioactive Thermal Generator.

Also, the dust is static

Ok sorry for the noob question. I guessed no, just because of the risks, but now I see there is no point trying.