Kuwait Times

European lander starts descent to Mars surface

-

A European lander started a threeday, million-kilometre descent to Mars yesterday, quitting its mothership to test technology for a daring mission to scout the Red Planet for signs of life. Flight director Michel Denis confirmed the lander Schiaparel­li had separated, to loud applause at mission control in Darmstadt, Germany some 175 million km from where the maneuver was executed. Confirmati­on of the milestone separation was webcast live. Thirteen years after its first, failed, attempt to place a rover on Mars, the high-stakes test is a key element in Europe’s latest bid to reach our neighbouri­ng planet’s hostile surface, this time working with Russia.

As planned, the 600-kg, paddling poolsized lander separated from an unmanned craft called the Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) after a seven-month, 496million-km trek from Earth. Schiaparel­li’s main goal is to test entry and landing gear and technology for a subsequent rover which will mark the second phase and highlight of the ExoMars mission. After a two-year funding delay, the rover is due for launch in 2020, arriving about six months later to explore the Red Planet

and drill into it, in search of extraterre­strial life - past or present. While any life is unlikely to be found on the barren, radiation-blasted surface, scientists say traces of methane in Mars’ thin atmosphere may indicate something living undergroun­d - likely to be single-celled microbes, if that is the case. Mars has become a graveyard for many a mission seeking to probe a planet that has captured the human imaginatio­n for millennia. Since the 1960s, more than half of US, Russian and European attempts to land and operate craft on the Martian surface have failed.

The last time the European Space Agency (ESA) tried, the British-built Beagle 2 disappeare­d without a trace after separating from the Mars Express mothership in Dec 2003. The mini-lab - a disc about the size of a dustbin lid was finally spotted in Jan 2015 in a NASA image. Getting a lander on Mars “is a complex mission,” said Thierry Blancquaer­t, Schiaparel­li’s manager.

Craft must be built to survive a long trip from Earth, then a high-speed, ultra-hot journey through Mars’ tenuous, carbon dioxide-rich atmosphere. They require protection against a heat of several thousand degrees Celsius heat generated by atmospheri­c friction, extreme braking just above the surface, and a soft touchdown in terrain where any jagged rocks or craters could spell doom. So far, only the United States has successful­ly operated rovers on Mars. After releasing its precious charge on Sunday, the TGO was programmed to change course to avoid crashing into Mars.

 ??  ?? An artist’s impression depicts the separation of the ExoMars 2016 entry, descent and landing demonstrat­or module (center) from the Trace Gas Orbiter (left) and heading for Mars. — AP
An artist’s impression depicts the separation of the ExoMars 2016 entry, descent and landing demonstrat­or module (center) from the Trace Gas Orbiter (left) and heading for Mars. — AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait