Waterloo Region Record

Euro probe destroyed on landing

Mars lander likely blew up on hitting the surface too fast, says agency

- Frank Jordans

BERLIN — Europe’s experiment­al Mars probe hit the right spot — but at the wrong speed — and may have ended up in a fiery ball of rocket fuel when it struck the surface, scientists said Friday.

Pictures taken by a NASA satellite show a black spot in the area where the Schiaparel­li lander was meant to touch down Wednesday, the European Space Agency said. The images end two days of speculatio­n following the probe’s unexpected radio silence less than a minute before the planned landing.

“Estimates are that Schiaparel­li dropped from a height of between 2 and 4 kilometres therefore impacting at a considerab­le speed, greater than 300 km/h,” the agency said.

It said the large disturbanc­e captured in the NASA photograph­s may have been caused by the probe’s steep crash-landing, which would have sprayed matter around like a blast site on Earth.

“It is also possible that the lander exploded on impact, as its thruster propellant tanks were likely still full,” the agency said.

Schiaparel­li was designed to test technology for a more ambitious European Mars landing in 2020. The European Space Agency said the probe’s mother ship was successful­ly placed into orbit Wednesday and will soon begin analyzing the Martian atmosphere in search for evidence of life.

“In my heart, of course I’m sad that we couldn’t land softly on the surface of Mars,” ESA chief Jan Woerner told The Associated Press. “But the main part of the mission is the science that will be done by the orbiter.”

Woerner said engineers received a wealth of data from the lander before the crash that will prove valuable for the next attempt in four years’ time. He described the mission as “a 96 per cent success.”

Still, the crash-landing was a painful reminder of how hard it is to put a spacecraft on the surface of the red planet.

Its resting place was photograph­ed by NASA’s Mars Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter, which also spotted Europe’s last ill-fated mission to the surface of the planet. The Beagle 2 probe landed on Mars in 2003 but failed to deploy its solar panels properly, preventing it from functionin­g.

There have only been seven successful robotic landings on Mars, all by NASA. The last landing was in 2012, when the Curiosity rover touched down in a Martian crater.

Landing on Mars is notoriousl­y difficult because of the planet’s thin, dusty atmosphere. Inbound spacecraft hit the atmosphere at more than 19,000 km/h and have only minutes to slow down and land.

With the loss of Schiaparel­li, only two spacecraft are currently roaming the Martian surface — Curiosity and Opportunit­y, which landed in 2004.

ESA said that, according to what its scientists have been able to piece together so far, Schiaparel­li suffered problems during the last 50 seconds of its descent through the harsh Martian atmosphere.

The picture taken by NASA’s orbiter shows two features that weren’t visible on the surface when the spacecraft photograph­ed the area in May. The first is a bright spot of about 12 metres diameter, likely to be Schiaparel­li’s parachute, ESA said.

The second was described as “a fuzzy dark patch roughly 15 by 40 metres in size and about 1 kilometre north of the parachute” and is likely to be the lander.

While Schiaparel­li was able to beam back some 600 megabytes of data before the crash, scientists won’t get any of the close-up photos the probe took during its descent. Those were meant to be transmitte­d after the landing.

ESA said the other part of the ExoMars mission — the Trace Gas Orbiter — was “working very well and will take science calibratio­n data during two orbits in November.”

The spacecraft will then descend to an altitude of about 400 kilometres and begin its study of Mars next year.

 ?? D. DUCROS, ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This artist’s rendering shows the separation of the ExoMars 2016 entry, descent and landing demonstrat­or module, named Schiaparel­li. The thin atmosphere of Mars makes for a very difficult landing.
D. DUCROS, ASSOCIATED PRESS This artist’s rendering shows the separation of the ExoMars 2016 entry, descent and landing demonstrat­or module, named Schiaparel­li. The thin atmosphere of Mars makes for a very difficult landing.

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