Houston Chronicle

NASA seeks help with pricey, slow Mars sample mission

- By Corinne Purtill LOS ANGELES TIMES

After months of turmoil over the future of a vaunted mission to bring samples of the Red Planet back to Earth, NASA has its verdict on Mars Sample Return.

The space agency is “committed” to bringing those rocks back from Mars, administra­tor Bill Nelson said Monday, but will have to do it with way less money and in far less time than currently designed.

And how exactly is NASA going to pull that off? Right now it has no idea — and it’s looking for someone who does.

“I have asked our folks to reach out with a request for informatio­n to industry, to (the Jet Propulsion Laboratory) and to all NASA centers, and to report back this fall an alternate plan that will get (the samples) back quicker and cheaper,” Nelson said in a press conference at NASA headquarte­rs.

His comments came in response to an independen­t review commission­ed by NASA last year that declared there was “near zero probabilit­y” of Mars Sample Return making its proposed 2028 launch date, and “no credible” way to fulfill the mission within its current budget.

Pulling off the mission as designed would likely cost up to $11 billion, the review board found, with the samples not reaching Earth until at least 2040.

“The bottom line is that $11 billion is too expensive, and not returning samples until 2040 is unacceptab­ly too long,” Nelson said. “It’s the decade of the 2040s that we’re going to be landing astronauts on Mars.”

The announceme­nt comes as something of a blow to JPL, the La Cañada Flintridge, Calif., institutio­n tasked with managing the mission. JPL has already laid off more than 600 employees and 40 contractor­s this year after NASA ordered it to reduce spending in anticipati­on of budget cuts spurred by the challenges of Mars Sample Return.

Proposals go out soon to all NASA centers and the private aerospace sector for “a revised plan that utilizes innovation and proven technology to lower risks, to lower costs and to lower mission complexity so we can return these really precious samples to Earth in the 2030s,” said Nicky Fox, associate administra­tor, Science Mission Directorat­e. The due date for proposals is next month, and those selected for further study will get NASA grants this summer.

This essentiall­y puts JPL in a position of having to compete for its own project.

“Right now if JPL were to come up with the answer, then I’d say JPL is gonna be sitting pretty good,” Nelson said during Monday’s news conference. “But we’re opening this up to everyone because we want to get every new and fresh idea that we can.”

NASA’s decision to outsource a solution to the Mars Sample Return problem frustrated some Mars scientists.

“What I expected is for NASA to step up and say, ‘These things are hard and we choose to do them,’ ” said Bethany L. Ehlmann, a planetary scientist at Caltech. “That is the leadership required to be the nation leading the world in space exploratio­n.”

A joint project with the European Space Agency, Mars Sample Return would deliver rocks, rubble and dust that have already been gathered and sealed into tubes by the Perseveran­ce rover.

The current design relies on a lander that would retrieve those tubes from the Red Planet’s Jezero Crater and use a small rocket to ferry them into Martian orbit, where they would rendezvous with a spacecraft that would make the journey back to Earth. The rocket would touch down on Earth roughly five years after the orbiter’s launch.

The ultimate goal is to comb the samples for evidence that life has ever existed on Mars, and to help NASA plan for future staffed missions, Nelson said.

In the most recent planetary science decadal survey, a report prepared for NASA every 10 years by the National Academy of Sciences, Engineerin­g, and Medicine, planetary scientists named the Mars Sample Return mission as the “highest scientific priority of NASA’s robotic exploratio­n efforts this decade” and argued that the program should be completed “as soon as is practicabl­y possible with no increase or decrease in its current scope.”

But the authors cautioned that the ambitious mission shouldn’t come at the cost of other planetary science, suggesting a roughly $5 billion to $7 billion cap.

“Mars Sample Return is of fundamenta­l strategic importance to NASA, U.S. leadership in planetary science, and internatio­nal cooperatio­n and should be completed as rapidly as possible,” the report stated. “However, its cost should not be allowed to undermine the long-term programmat­ic balance of the planetary portfolio.”

 ?? NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS via Tribune News Service ?? Tubes holding samples of rock cores, broken rock and dust collected by NASA’s Perseveran­ce rover sit on the surface of Mars. The space agency’s Mars Sample Return mission aims to bring them to Earth for closer study.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS via Tribune News Service Tubes holding samples of rock cores, broken rock and dust collected by NASA’s Perseveran­ce rover sit on the surface of Mars. The space agency’s Mars Sample Return mission aims to bring them to Earth for closer study.

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