What's New
Our
Team
Our
Friends
Interviews
Activities
Resources
Ask
Experts
Our
Mission
|
|
Eve of Mars
Arrival
by
Stephanie Wong
Mars is
getting big... really big. As ESA's Mars
Express spacecraft begins its last week of cruise
to the Red Planet, it does its final housekeeping
tasks. On December 19th, six days before
Mars Express is to arrive in Martian orbit, it
released its tiny payload, the Beagle 2 lander.
Beagle 2 is only 60 kg (~130 lb) and has been
piggybacking on the orbiter since launch.
Separated from its mother craft, it is now on a
direct trajectory to intercept Isidis Planitia,
possibly an ancient impact basin. It has no
rocket to slow it down. Beagle
2 falls towards its landing site when at the
appropriate time, parachutes deploy and the heat
shield ejects. Airbags cushion the impact
and the lander bounces and rolls to its final
spot. Unlike the Mars Pathfinder in 1997,
the airbags will not deflate but be shot out into
the distance, getting out of the lander's way.
Beagle 2 will then unlatch, flipping up its five
solar panels up like how a soup can lid is opened.
It will then hunt for life on Mars. |
Both Images
Credit: All Rights Reserved Beagle 2
|

Isidis
Planitia:
Landing Site for Beagle 2.
|
Meanwhile, the
orbiter, Mars Express, makes a series of "orbit
burns" in order to set itself into an
elliptical polar orbit. A polar orbit,
passing the polar caps on each orbit, allows Mars
Express to cover the entire planet in one day.
Every 7-1/2 hours, it can swoop down to a
distance of 250 km to get some close glimpses of
the planet. |
Image Credit:
Kees
Veenenbos |
This
dynamic pair of spacecraft is the result of much hard
work by the technical and scientific teams across Europe.
Parts of the Mars Express were built in a number of
countries and then integrated at Astrium, an aerospace
company in France. The Beagle 2 lander, Britain's
contribution to the mission, was also built by Astrium.
After a successful launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in
Kazhakstan, the mission team began their even more hectic
schedule, training for mission operations and preparing
for Mars arrival. In order to be ready for any
problem that could surface, the engineering team at ESOC,
Germany, home of the Mars Mission Operations Centre,
practiced various scenarios. Simulation Officer
Zeina Mounzer, for each test, planted errors, failures,
alarms and anything possibly imaginable to make the
engineering team think hard and come about a solution to
save the mission. This way, the team encounters in
"real-time" problems that may occur so that
they can sort out their strengths, weaknesses and test
their preparedness. The tests increase in
difficulty and when they are over, the team knows they
are ready as they will ever be.
But there is
light joviality during this busy time. Mars Express
is set to arrive at Mars on Christmas Day and there isn't
a better Christmas than seeing their creation beaming
back a healthy signal, saying, "we've made it!"
A little plush beagle mascot (with solar flare protective
sunglasses, of course!) looks upon the people at mission
control, now a family, with fingers crossed for one thing
only. Presents might be replaced with bits of
wonderful data and a comfy couch by the warm mantlepiece
with a computer console, but the Mars Express team would
not have it any other way. Their baby, the Mars
Express, has reached its red Christmas Star, ushering in
a new era of planetary exploration.
Imagiverse
wishes best of luck to the Mars Express Team and to all a
Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays and great joy in the
upcoming year.
References: http://mars.esa.int/ & http://www.beagle2.com/
Send
your questions about Mars to Imagiverse - Ask The Expert.
Links of
Interest
Mars
Express http://mars.esa.int/
Beagle 2 http://www.beagle2.com/
European Space Agency http://www.esa.int/
European Space Operations Centre http://www.esoc.esa.de/
History of the HMS Beagle http://www.aboutdarwin.com/voyage/voyage01.html
Weather Forecasts for the Mars Landers http://www.msss.com/mars_images/moc/mer_weather/
- 21 December 2003
|