Albuquerque Journal

Planet Earth working on 3 Mars landers

U.S., Europe, China, Emirates plan trips

- BY MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — As Mars’ newest resident settles in, Planet Earth is working on three more landers and at least two orbiters to join the scientific Martian brigade.

NASA’s InSight spacecraft touched down on the sweeping, red equatorial plains Monday, less than 400 miles from Curiosity, the only other working robot on Mars.

That’s about the distance from San Francisco to Pasadena, Calif., home to Mission Control for Mars.

InSight — the eighth successful Martian lander — should be wrapping up two years of digging and quake monitoring by the time rovers arrive from the U.S., Europe and China.

NASA’s Mars 2020 will hunt for rocks that might hold evidence of ancient microbial life and stash them in a safe place for return to Earth in the early 2030s. It’s targeting a oncewet river delta in Jezero Crater.

The European-Russian ExoMars will also sniff out possible past life, drilling a couple yards down for chemical fossils. A spacecraft that was part of an ExoMars mission in 2016 crash-landed on the red planet.

The Chinese Mars 2020 will feature both an orbiter and lander. The United Arab Emirates, meanwhile, aims to send its first spacecraft to Mars in 2020; the orbiter is named Hope, or Amal in Arabic.

It seems our neighbor Mars holds a siren song for Earthlings, even as NASA shifts its immediate attention back to our moon.

Just three days after InSight’s landing, NASA announced a new commercial lunar delivery program. The space agency has chosen nine U.S. companies to compete in getting science and technology experiment­s to the lunar surface. The first launch could be next year.

NASA wants to see how it goes before trying something similar on Mars.

“The moon is where it’s at right now relative to commercial space,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, head of NASA’s science mission office, which is leading the lunar payload project.

 ?? UNITED ARAB EMIRATES SPACE AGENCY/AP ?? Engineers discuss steps to disassembl­e a spacecraft’s sun shield baffle. The United Arab Emirates aims to send its first spacecraft to Mars in 2020.
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES SPACE AGENCY/AP Engineers discuss steps to disassembl­e a spacecraft’s sun shield baffle. The United Arab Emirates aims to send its first spacecraft to Mars in 2020.

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