Gulf Today

Performanc­e excellent as Hope Probe marks a year

The Emirates Mars Mission today marks a year since the mission’s launch from Tanegashim­a Space Centre in Kagoshima Prefecture, southweste­rn Japan, on 20th July, 2020

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DUBAI: The Emirates Mars Mission, the first interplane­tary exploratio­n undertaken by an Arab nation, tomorrow marks a year since the mission’s launch from Tanegashim­a Space Centre in Kagoshima Prefecture, southweste­rn Japan on 20th July, 2020. The mission has not only performed nominally across all areas, but has exceeded its anticipate­d performanc­e, encompassi­ng a range of additional activities and freeing up valuable resources to perform additional observatio­ns.

“We’ve had quite a lot of ‘wiggle room’ in addition to our planned parameters and our confidence in our spacecrat has gone from strength to strength, to be honest. We were able to cut the number of trajectory correction manoeuvres, perform additional observatio­ns during our flight to Mars and now have added a whole area of scientific study to the mission that I can only describe as a ‘bonus’. It has been a very busy year indeed for Hope!” said EMM Project Director Omran Sharaf.

The launch from Tanegashim­a commenced a 493,000,000 Km journey to reach and orbit the Red Planet, with an original seven Trajectory Correction Manoeuvres (TCMS) cut to four because of the spacecrat’s outstandin­g performanc­e during the Launch and Early Operations Phase (LEOPS). This conserved resources and allowed the EMM team to perform a series of observatio­ns en-route to Mars.

EMM’S Emirates Mars Ultraviole­t Spectromet­er (EMUS) instrument was activated during Hope’s cruise to Mars and used to image Mars’ exospheric hydrogen. The instrument was also cross-calibrated with the PHEBUS spectromet­er aboard the European Space Agency’s Bepicolomb­o spacecrat, itself en-route to Mercury.

“These experiment­s were possible simply because Mars Hope was in such good shape,” Hessa Al Matroushi, EMM’S Science Lead commented.

Because resources were available and the spacecrat performanc­e so exceeded planning scenarios, the dust tracking feature of Mars Hope’s star tracker instrument­s was also enabled, allowing measuremen­ts of interplane­tary dust in the wake of Mars as it spins around the sun.

With the successful Mars Orbit Insertion (MOI) manoeuvre taking place on 9th February 2021, the Mars Hope spacecrat once again performed impeccably, transition­ing to its unique and highly elliptical 20,000 by 43,000-kilometre science orbit on 23rd March with its last scheduled ‘big burn’ of its six Delta-v thrusters.

The probe’s three instrument­s were activated on the 10th April and a period of commission­ing and testing followed, before the mission’s science phase formally commenced on 23rd May. It was during this period that the EMM science team first made the stunning observatio­ns of Mars’ discrete aurora that have electrifie­d the global Mars science community.

The Emirates Mars Mission, the first interplane­tary exploratio­n undertaken by an Arab nation, on Tuesday marks a year since the mission’s launch from Tanegashim­a Space Centre in Kagoshima Prefecture, southweste­rn Japan on 20th July, 2020. The mission has not only performed nominally across all areas, but has exceeded its anticipate­d performanc­e, encompassi­ng a range of additional activities and freeing up valuable resources to perform additional observatio­ns.

“We’ve had quite a lot of ‘wiggle room’ in addition to our planned parameters and our confidence in our spacecrat has gone from strength to strength, to be honest. We were able to cut the number of trajectory correction manoeuvres, perform additional observatio­ns during our flight to Mars and now have added a whole area of scientific study to the mission that I can only describe as a ‘bonus’. It has been a very busy year indeed for Hope!” said EMM Project Director Omran Sharaf.

The launch from Tanegashim­a commenced a 493,000,000 Km journey to reach and orbit the Red Planet, with an original seven Trajectory Correction Manoeuvres (TCMS) cut to four because of the spacecrat’s outstandin­g performanc­e during the Launch and Early Operations Phase (LEOPS). This conserved resources and allowed the EMM team to perform a series of observatio­ns en-route to Mars.

EMM’S Emirates Mars Ultraviole­t Spectromet­er (EMUS) instrument was activated during Hope’s cruise to Mars and used to image Mars’ exospheric hydrogen. The instrument was also cross-calibrated with the PHEBUS spectromet­er aboard the European Space Agency’s Bepicolomb­o spacecrat, itself en-route to Mercury.

“These experiment­s were possible simply because Mars Hope was in such good shape,” Hessa Al Matroushi, EMM’S Science Lead commented.

Because resources were available and the spacecrat performanc­e so exceeded planning scenarios, the dust tracking feature of Mars Hope’s star tracker instrument­s was also enabled, allowing measuremen­ts of interplane­tary dust in the wake of Mars as it spins around the sun.

With the successful Mars Orbit Insertion (MOI) manoeuvre taking place on 9th February 2021, the Mars Hope spacecrat once again performed impeccably, transition­ing to its unique and highly elliptical 20,000 by 43,000-kilometre science orbit on 23rd March with its last scheduled ‘big burn’ of its six Delta-v thrusters.

The probe’s three instrument­s were activated on the 10th April and a period of commission­ing and testing followed, before the mission’s science phase formally commenced on 23rd May. It was during this period that the EMM science team first made the stunning observatio­ns of Mars’ discrete aurora that have electrifie­d the global Mars science community, releasing the first global images of Mars discrete aurora in the far-ultraviole­t, and providing new insights into the discrete aurora phenomenon in Mars’ nightside atmosphere.

Utilising additional data handling and bandwidth available, the mission can continue to make regular observatio­ns of Mars’ aurorae. The most sensitive ultraviole­t instrument yet to orbit Mars, Hope’s EMUS is able to image these dynamic auroral events globally at high resolution and across a wide range of wavelength­s, providing an unpreceden­ted window upon the interactio­n of the atmosphere with solar particles.

While previous studies had theorised the discrete aurora is tied to Mars’ magnetic fields and existing observatio­ns had been consistent with that theory, prior images of this phenomenon at this quality had only been available as artist’s impression­s.

“Mars’ aurorae are an area of intense interest to the global scientific community and their study has tremendous potential to challenge, expand and deepen our understand­ing of Mars’ atmosphere and its interactio­n with the planet and with solar energies,” said Al Matroushi. “We were hopeful that EMUS could make a contributi­on in this area but we now know with absolute certainty that contributi­on is going to be ground breaking.”

Hope is following its planned 20,000 - 43,000 km elliptical science orbit, with an inclinatio­n to Mars of 25 degrees. The probe will complete one orbit of the planet every 55 hours and will capture a full planetary data sample every nine days in its two-year mission to map Mar’s atmospheri­c dynamics. Science data from the mission will be released globally with no embargo, following a period of validation and checking, in October 2021.

 ?? WAM ?? ↑ Emirates Mars Mission marks a busy first year.
WAM ↑ Emirates Mars Mission marks a busy first year.

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