Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The Beagle has landed

Britain's missing spacecraft found on Mars

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LONDON, Jan 16 ( Reuters) - Britain's "Beagle 2" spacecraft, once dubbed "a heroic failure" by the nation's Astronomer Royal, was re- branded "a great success" on Friday for being found on Mars 11 years after going missing.

Beagle 2, part of a European Space Agency's Mars Express mission searching for extraterre­strial life, had been due to land on Mars on Christmas Day 2003, but disappeare­d on December 19, 2003. Until now, nothing had been heard from it.

But at a packed news conference at London's Royal Society scientific institutio­n on Friday, space experts said the tiny Mars lander had been found on the surface of the red planet.

"Beagle 2 is no longer lost," said David Parker, chief executive of UK Space Agency.

He said recent images from the HiRISE camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter showed "good evidence" that the spacecraft landed on Mars on the date it was due -- Dec. 25, 2003 -- but had only partially deployed.

"The entry, descent and landing sequence for Beagle 2 worked and the lander did successful­ly touch down on Mars on Christmas Day 2003," UK Space Agency said in a statement.

Beagle 2 -- measuring less than 2 metres across -- was named after the ship Charles Darwin sailed when he formulated his theory of evolution. It was built by British scientists led by Colin Pillinger for about 50 million pounds ($ 85 million)

The plan was for it to report back from the Mars' surface using instrument­s designed to help search for signs of life, but nothing was heard after it was dropped off to make its landing.

"We were left with a mystery, a mystery that has continued to this day," Parker said.

Mark Sims from Leicester University, Beagle 2' s mission manager, said that while the spacecraft had failed to communicat­e any data from Mars, it had succeeded in getting to its target, landing, and inspiring scientists. "Overall, I would say Beagle 2 was a great success," he told the news conference.

Martin Rees, Britain's Astronomer Royal, last year praised Beagle 2 and its eccentric creator Pillinger, who had died at age 70, saying: "This was a failure, but a heroic failure."

Sims said the find was exciting, frustratin­g and "tinged with sadness" because Pillinger did not live to see it.

Asked to suggest what might have gone wrong, Sims said: "It was most probably a bad luck scenario -- a hard landing."

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