NASA's Perseverance Rover Completes First AI-Planned Drive on Mars

NASA's Perseverance rover has completed its first drives on Mars planned entirely by artificial intelligence, a task traditionally handled by human operators. The demonstration, conducted in December 2025, used generative AI to analyze mission data and create safe navigation waypoints for the rover. This technology allows missions to operate more efficiently and tackle challenging terrain as distance from Earth increases. The initiative was a collaboration between NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Anthropic, utilizing the company's Claude AI models.

Key Points: Mars Rover Completes First AI-Planned Drive, NASA Says

  • First AI-planned drive on Mars
  • Used generative AI for navigation
  • Drove over 800 feet autonomously
  • Collaboration with Anthropic's Claude AI
  • Enhances efficiency for distant missions
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NASA's Perseverance Rover completes 1st AI-planned drive on Mars

NASA's Perseverance rover has successfully completed its first drives on Mars planned entirely by artificial intelligence, marking a major leap in autonomous space exploration.

"This demonstration shows how far our capabilities have advanced and broadens how we will explore other worlds. - Jared Isaacman"

New Delhi, Feb 1

The six-wheeled Perseverance rover has completed the first drives on Mars that were planned by artificial intelligence, NASA said.

Conducted on December 8 and 10, 2025, the demonstration used generative AI to create waypoints for Perseverance. The complex decision-making task is typically performed manually by the mission's human rover planners at the US space agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.

"This demonstration shows how far our capabilities have advanced and broadens how we will explore other worlds," said NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman.

"Autonomous technologies like this can help missions to operate more efficiently, respond to challenging terrain, and increase science return as distance from Earth grows. It's a strong example of teams applying new technology carefully and responsibly in real operations," he added.

The rover -- about the size of a car and carrying seven scientific instruments -- has been exploring Mars, studying its geology and atmosphere, as well as collecting samples since 2021.

During the demonstration, the team leveraged a type of generative AI called vision-language models to analyse existing data from the surface mission dataset.

The AI used the same imagery and data that human planners rely on to generate waypoints -- fixed locations where the rover takes up a new set of instructions -- so that Perseverance could safely navigate the challenging Martian terrain.

The initiative was led out of JPL's Rover Operations Center (ROC) in collaboration with Anthropic, using the company's Claude AI models.

The team for the six-wheeled scientist used a vision-capable AI to create a safe route over the Red Planet's surface without the input of human route planners.

NASA noted that on December 8, with generative AI waypoints in its memory, Perseverance drove 689 feet (210 metres). Two days later, it drove 807 feet (246 metres).

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Amazing tech, but the cost must be astronomical. I wonder how much of this cutting-edge AI research trickles down to benefit common people on Earth. Solving traffic in Bengaluru or Delhi with AI seems like a more immediate need than a rover on Mars, no?
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Vikram M
The collaboration with Anthropic is key. Indian startups in AI are doing phenomenal work. We have the talent. What we need is for our space program and private sector to forge similar partnerships. Jai Hind!
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Sarah B
As a tech professional in Bangalore, this is fascinating. The use of vision-language models for terrain analysis is a huge leap. The real test will be how it handles unexpected obstacles. The distances driven autonomously are impressive for a first demo.
R
Rohit P
Waah! This is like a sci-fi movie coming to life. Perseverance is truly living up to its name. Imagine the data it's collecting for future human missions. Maybe one day an Indian will walk on Mars thanks to tech like this. 🇮🇳
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Karthik V
A respectful criticism: The article mentions "carefully and responsibly," which is crucial. AI decision-making in such a high-stakes, one-of-a-kind mission carries immense risk. One software bug could end a billion-dollar mission. Human oversight must remain paramount, even as we automate.

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