Scientists reported that the InSight lander detected seismic and acoustic waves from a series of impacts in 2020 and 2021.
A satellite orbiting the Red Planet confirmed the impact location as being up to 180 miles away from the lander.
Scientists are delighted by the detections, as they are a first for another planet. The first confirmed meteoroid exploded into at least three pieces, each leaving its own crater.
An 11-second audio snippet of this strike includes three 'bloops', as Nasa calls them, sounding like metal flapping loudly in the wind here on Earth.
“After three years of InSight waiting to detect an impact, those craters looked beautiful,” said Ingrid Daubar of Brown University, co-author of a research paper in the journal Nature Geoscience describing the findings.
The InSight team expected to pick up numerous meteoroid strikes, given Mars’s proximity to the asteroid belt and the planet’s thin atmosphere, which tends to mean that space...