NASA Shows Off Mars Flying Saucer Technology

Spacecraft could help manned missions land gently on Red Planet.

Spinning an object keeps it pointed in one direction, and the saucer is equipped with a rocket to slow it down.

After today's test, the next step for the vehicle will be in June when it will blast off on a test into near-space from the Navy's Pacific Missile Range Facility in Kauai, Hawaii, NASA officials said.

Testing the vehicle in the thin air of Earth's stratosphere this summer is the nearest "local" test to see how the flying saucer fares in Martian-like conditions.