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Perseverance ejected two 70 kg "cruise balance masses" just before it became an airplane, to move its center of mass off axis and increase its angle of attack from 0° to about 16° to make it steerable.

Shortly before it stopped being an airplane, it ejected six more tungsten "balance masses," in something called the Straighten Up and Fly Right (SUFR) maneuver. This reduced its AoA to less than 5° before deploying its parachute.

  1. How many kg were those six masses?
  2. Why were that many needed?
    If for sequential deployment to damp oscillations, why were so few needed? Why not spray a thousand, or even spray a heavy liquid?

Its 2012 predecessor Curiosity had 2x 75 kg and 6x 25 kg masses.

Camille Goudeseune
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1 Answers1

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The link in BrendanLuke15's comment just now eventually led me to an answer.

The six masses were each 25 kg, the same as Curiosity's, according to p. 3 of JPL's 2019-03-02 technical report Mars 2020 Entry, Descent, and Landing system overview:

Finally, the vehicle executes a maneuver called ”Straighten Up and Fly Right” (SUFR), ejecting six 25 kg balance masses to set the angle of attack to 0.

Other publications hint, but only hint, that they were deployed simultaneously.
Their full name is Entry Balance Masses (EBMs), if that helps someone else figure out why six were needed.

Camille Goudeseune
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    The descent stage landing radar (see figure 2) "sticks out" towards the side with 6 masses (right side), maybe the radar creates a volume crunch that required 6 smaller masses rather than 2 bigger ones (see figure 22 for a "front view" of that side) – BrendanLuke15 Mar 08 '22 at 00:45