Waterloo Region Record

Fate of Mars lander ‘not good’

- Geir Moulson and Christoph Noelting

DARMSTADT, GERMANY — The European Space Agency lost contact with an experiment­al Mars probe shortly before its planned landing on the red planet. Scientists said that wasn’t a good sign for the Schiaparel­li lander, but it was too soon to give up on the craft.

ESA successful­ly put Schiaparel­li’s mother ship, which will analyze the Martian atmosphere, into orbit. But several hours after the lander was supposed to have touched down on Wednesday, there was no firm word on its fate.

“The signal (from Schiaparel­li) went through the majority of the descent phase but it stopped at a certain point that we reckon was before the landing,” Paolo Ferri, ESA’s head of operations, said at mission control in Darmstadt, Germany.

“To conclude more on this, because there could be many reasons for that, we need more informatio­n,” he said. “It’s clear that these are not good signs.”

An update is expected on Thursday, he said.

Schiaparel­li was meant to test technology for a future European robotic mission to Mars. It is part of a larger internatio­nal mission called ExoMars that will help in the hunt for life on the planet.

Schiaparel­li was released from the mother ship, the Trace Gas Orbiter, on Sunday. Scientists said the gentle approach would turn into a six-minute hell ride when the probe plunged into the hot, dusty Martian atmosphere and hurtled toward the surface at 21,000 km/h. The plan was for Schiaparel­li to deploy a parachute and then thrusters to slow down to 10 km/h before hitting the surface.

Landing a spacecraft on Mars is notoriousl­y difficult and several past missions have failed, including the European Space Agency’s previous attempt in 2003 with the rover Beagle 2. It made it to Mars but its solar panels didn’t unfold properly, preventing it from communicat­ing.

While Schiaparel­li has some scientific instrument­s on board, its main purpose was to rehearse the landing and test technology for a European rover mission to Mars in 2020. NASA has successful­ly placed several robotic vehicles on the planet, including the Opportunit­y and Curiosity rovers. The ExoMars program, which comprises the current and 2020 mission, is ESA’s first interplane­tary mission jointly undertaken with the Russian space agency Roscosmos.

Schiaparel­li took off for Mars in March aboard a Russian rocket together with the Trace Gas Orbiter. The orbiter, which also has NASA-made instrument­s on board, will act as a radio relay for future missions from the surface of Mars, as well as analyze methane and other gases in the atmosphere.

Methane is created by biological or geological activity and breaks down within a few hundred years once it reaches the atmosphere, suggesting there is biological or geological activity on Mars now or in the recent past. The prospect of finding even microscopi­c organisms on Mars has excited scientists for some time, but so far none has been discovered. ESA head Jan Woerner insisted the mission should still be considered a success because the mother ship had been placed in orbit around Mars as planned.

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