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MISSIONS TO
MARS - PART TWO
A
renewed interest in Mars began in 1996 with the launch of two very important
spacecrafts. Mars Global Surveyor and Mars |
As well as Mars Global Surveyor and Mars Pathfinder in 1996, Russia attempted to go to Mars with its Mars 96 orbiter. Based on technology used in the Phobos missions of 1988, Mars 96 failed to leave Earth's atmosphere and landed in the Pacific Ocean. This wasn't the only failed mission to Mars of the late 1990s. Japan launched Nozomi on July 4th 1998 but it ran out of fuel before reaching Mars, so was sent off to wander space for eternity, probably looking for somewhere to fill up. Launched on December 11th 1998, NASA's Mars Climate Orbiter, which should have orbited the planet and observed the planet's climate, instead fell into the planet's atmosphere and is likely to have burnt up during its descent. This navigation mistake was caused by scientists getting their units of measurement mixed up, using imperial units instead of metric! Mars Polar Lander also suffered an unfortunate end. Launched on March 3rd 1999 and ready to land on December 3rd 1999, communications were suddenly lost as the craft began its descent to the planet's surface. It is likely that the craft did land on Mars, but where about is a mystery. Mars Global Surveyor attempted to find it, but gave up in the end and went back to looking at craters instead.
Since the start of the twenty
first century, there have been several more missions to Mars. These have mostly
been successful and are still active now. One of the main reasons for visiting
Mars is because it is thought that the planet may once have been like Earth. It
is widely believed that Mars was once a wet planet with warmer climates and a
thicker atmosphere. And, if Mars was once like Earth, then there's a possibility
that it could have once supported life. Or, even better, could still support
life! It is inevitable that people from Earth will one day set foot on Mars and
there's a chance that those people are now alive on Earth! It has been almost
forty years since anybody has been to the Moon, but plans are in progress to
send people back there within the next fifteen years. So after returning to the Moon,
Mars is logically the next place to visit. Spacecraft going to Mars look for
signs of life, and something they want to find is water. Living beings on Earth can exist in extreme conditions, but water
is seen as essential for all forms of life. The conditions on Mars are not as
extreme as some places on Earth can be, so if there is water there, there should
be no reason why there can't be life there too! Like Mars Global Surveyor, modern
space craft are sent to observe Mars while orbiting the planet. Being able to
see the planet in more detail than ever before, they can look for evidence of
water in all four corners of the planet, not that Mars has corners. NASA's Mars Odyssey
2001 (named after the film, 2001: A Space Odyssey) was launched in 2001 and is
currently orbiting the planet. It was joined in 2003 by Europe's Mars Express
(pictured left just after lift-off) and in 2006 by NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Interestingly, some of
the equipment on Mars Express came from Russia's failed Mars 96 mission so in a
way that mission wasn't a complete waste! Mars Odyssey and Mars Express were
used in late 2006 to try to spot Mars Global Surveyor when it lost its power and
stopped communicating with Earth, but failed to find it. I'm sure it'll turn up
one day. It's always in the last place you look!
The three orbiters are still spinning around Mars and keeping and eye on the planet. However, down on Mars itself, there are three other active space craft. There are two Mars Exploration Rovers, known as Spirit and Opportunity, and a lander known as Phoenix. Like the Sojourner rover of the Pathfinder mission, Spirit and Opportunity are remote-controlled rovers that drive around the planet, take in the scenery and poke rocks. There should be a third rover there, Beagle 2, which hitched a ride onboard Europe's Mars Express space craft in 2003. As Beagle 2 dropped to the surface of Mars in December 2003, contact with it was lost and its final landing place is not known. Spirit and Opportunity however are two examples of spacecraft which have far exceeded their expected life span. Spirit was launched on June 10th 2003 and Opportunity was launched July 7th 2003. Both crafts reached their destination and landed safely in January 2004, in completely different locations on the planet. They were expected to last about 90 days, but at the time of writing in May 2008, they are still active after over 1,500 days each! Of course, their condition has deteriorated, but they still continue to send back useful and interesting information from the surface of Mars. They still haven't found any aliens though! Although the two crafts have survived for much longer than they were expected to, they still have a long way to go before they beat Viking 1's record of six years and 116 years of activity on the surface of Mars. The newest addition to Mars is Phoenix. Phoenix was launched in August 2007 and reached Mars in May 2008, landing on the planet's surface on May 25th. Phoenix landed near the northern polar region of Mars. As the main purpose of space exploration is to find life, Phoenix landed in an area which scientists believe would be a likely place for life to exist. Although it is unlikely that water is present on the surface of Mars, there are chances that it may be present below the surface. Phoenix will attempt to detect evidence of water below the surface, and has even taken a shovel and spade to go digging! Well, something that can dig a couple of metres under the surface. Like Spirit and Opportunity, Phoenix is only expected to last 90 days. Since it has landed in a region which gets extremely cold during Martian winter (up to three feet of carbon dioxide ice can form there in winter), Phoenix is not expected to last through the season. As well as going to Mars with various bits of scientific equipment, Spirit, Opportunity and Phoenix also took DVDs with them! These DVDs contain various messages from Earthlings to visitors to Mars (most likely to be human beings in years to come). They also feature examples of art and literature - such as a radio broadcast of the H.G. Wells' story The War of the Worlds - and the names of millions of people from Earth. Who knows what future visitors/passing Martians will play the DVDs on seeing as no DVD player has been sent over yet!

Image of Phoenix on Mars with its
DVD mounted to it.
Even though there is plenty of activity taking place on Mars now, Mars had better get used to it because there is more to come! Future rovers and landers include Mars Science Laboratory, Mars Sample Return Lander, Mars Scout 2, Mars Scout 3, Mars Astrobiology Field Lab Rover, Mars Planetary Evolution and Meteorology Network and ExoMars. Like past and present missions, these landers and rovers will analyse the surface of Mars, looking for signs of life and attempt to establish whether the planet could support life in the future. The ultimate aim is to put human beings on Mars. Human beings on Mars will need to survive there for several months, not days like during past missions to the Moon. Martian air is poisonous to breathe, and all food and drink will have to be taken to the planet from Earth. Including the journey time, a manned mission to Mars is likely to last for at least two years so scientists have to find ways of ensuring that human beings can survive for that long away from Earth. But, at least when they get to Mars, they'll have the three DVDs on Spirit, Opportunity and Phoenix to watch. Shame that the crafts are hundreds of miles apart!
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| MARS MENU |
MISSIONS TO MARS: PART TWO |
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- Main Menu - Bobsdog's
Space Quiz - E-mail Bob - Sign and View Bob's Guestbook - Lost in Space? -
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System - Comets - Asteroids - Galaxies - Stars - Space Exploration -
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