Deccan Chronicle

Fate of Mars lander hangs in balance

Schiaparel­li didn’t behave as expected as it headed down to surface

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Paris, Oct. 20: Europe’s second attempt at reaching the Mars surface appeared in peril on Thursday as initial analysis suggested a lander dubbed “Schiaparel­li”, a test-run for a future rover, may have plummeted to its demise.

While holding out faint hope, ground controller­s said it seemed the paddling pool-sized lander’s parachute may have been discarded too early, and its fall-breaking thrusters switched off too soon.

Schiaparel­li fell silent seconds before its scheduled touchdown, while its mothership Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) entered Mars’ orbit as planned — part of a joint EuropeanRu­ssian quest for evidence of life on the Red Planet, past or present.

“We are not in a position yet to determine the dynamic condition at which the lander touched the ground,” European Space Agency (ESA) head of solar and planetary missions Andrea Accomazzo told a webcast press briefing at mission control in Darmstadt, Germany.

Further analysis must be done of some 600 megabytes of data Schiaparel­li sent home before its signal died, to “know whether it survived structural­ly or not.” If not, this would be Europe’s second failed Mars landing in a row, joining a string of unsuccessf­ul attempts by global powers to explore our planetary neighbour’s hostile surface.

The British-built Beagle 2 robot lab disappeare­d without trace after separating from its mothership, Mars Express, in 2003. Its remains were finally spotted in a NASA photograph last year.

Schiaparel­li had travelled for seven years and 496 million kilometres onboard the TGO. — AFP

WHILE holding out faint hope, ground controller­s said it seemed the paddling pool-sized lander’s parachute may have been discarded too early, and its fall-breaking thrusters switched off too soon.

 ??  ?? Schiaparel­li while landing
Schiaparel­li while landing

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