Mission to Mars
Mars is back in the headlines this week, as space agencies push forward with new missions, say goodbye to a veteran spacecraft, and prepare fresh technology for future journeys to the Red Planet. According to NASA, the big news is the formal end of the MAVEN mission, the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN orbiter, after more than eleven years studying how the Martian atmosphere escapes into space and how the planet evolved from a wetter world to the cold desert we see today. NASA reports that contact with MAVEN was lost in December after the spacecraft passed behind Mars, and an independent review board has now confirmed that the spacecraft is not recoverable and can no longer perform its science or communications relay roles. NASA officials are marking the occasion with a media teleconference, emphasizing that MAVEN’s data set will continue to shape our understanding of Mars’ climate history and habitability for years to come. While one mission ends, work to reach Mars in the coming years is intensifying. Mars Daily reports that the European Space Agency’s ExoMars Rosalind Franklin rover program has taken a critical step toward launch, as its main supersonic parachute was recently “baked sterile” at ESA’s ESTEC test center. This high‑temperature treatment is designed to kill any Earth microbes clinging to the hardware, helping to protect Mars from biological contamination when the rover heads for the Red Planet, currently targeted for 2028. Engineers are now preparing further tests of the parachute system, which must slow the rover safely through the thin Martian atmosphere, a crucial technology after earlier ExoMars parachute difficulties. Mars Daily also notes continued activity on the surface of Mars itself. NASA’s Curiosity rover has begun a new drilling campaign in Gale Crater, targeting layered rocks that may record changes in ancient Martian lakes and climate. These samples help scientists piece together whether Mars once offered long‑lasting environments that could have supported microbial life. All of this unfolds against the backdrop of an increasingly crowded Mars exploration landscape, summarized by The Planetary Society’s catalog of every mission to Mars, with multiple active orbiters and rovers continuing to map, measure, and monitor the planet. Their ongoing observations, combined with MAVEN’s atmospheric legacy and the coming ExoMars rover, are converging on the same question: how habitable was Mars, and could traces of past life still be preserved in its rocks and soil? Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
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