NASA’s Mars Exploration Analysis Group (MEPAG) recently reviewed plans
by Europe, the Japanese, and the U.S. for future Mars exploration. The prognosis is for another kick ass decade
of Mars exploration.
We have enjoyed two decades of increasingly more focused exploration of
Mars. After a lull of twenty years, the 1996
Mars Pathfinder lander began what has became a flotilla of orbiters, landers,
and rovers to examine the Red Planet in increasing detail. Missions in flight or in development will
explore the processes that are stripping away the atmosphere, measure its trace
gases, and study the interior of another planet for the first time. Two missions will land rovers to poke and
prod two locations in detail. This is in
addition to the three orbiters and two rovers currently exploring this
world. Only for our moon do we have such
a rich understanding of another world.
The MEPAG meeting last month included the usual program review, but it
also coincided with the second workshop in the long selection process for the
landing site for NASA’s 2020 rover mission.
In this post, I’ll share highlights from the two meetings. (You can read the presentations here.)
Credit: J. Green, NASA |
The European Space Agency (ESA) has an active Mars program with the
Mars Express orbiter currently at Mars, two ExoMars missions in development,
and planning under way to select follow on missions. It will jointly develop and fly the two ExoMars
missions with the Russian space agency Roscosmos. The first, set to launch in 2016, will have
an orbiter that will focus on atmospheric chemistry and dynamics along with a
small European technology demonstration lander.
The second, to launch in 2018, will deliver a highly capable rover and
station that will search for signs of past or present life.
The current tensions between the US and Russia over the Ukraine have
the potential for disrupting these missions.
NASA plans to deliver its Electra communications package for the 2016
orbiter that will allow it to relay data from surface landers and rovers back
to Earth. Both ESA’s 2018 ExoMars rover
and NASA’s 2020 rover missions plan to use the ESA orbiter to relay data back
to Earth. Because Russia will launch the
mission, shipping equipment to Russia with the current political tensions over
Ukraine may prove difficult. With launch
just two years away, there’s little time to recover from any delays if they
occur. NASA also plans to deliver a key
parts of one of the 2018 rover’s instruments, but there is more time to deal
with that issue.
Other highlights from the ESA presentations:
- Both the 2016 and 2018 missions are on track other than the potential export issue (although no mention was made of whether or not funding has been fully secured for the 2018 mission which has been an open question).
- Russia is still scheduled to provide the key entry, descent, and landing system for the 2018 rover. This will be a major project for a space agency that hasn’t had a successful planetary mission in decades.
- Russia plans to host a surface station in the 2018 lander platform for long-term studies of the atmosphere and geophysics of Mars. Instrument selection will begin this spring.
- ESA is considering three missions to follow the 2018 rover. The current favorite, Phootprint, which might launch in 2024, would be a possible third joint mission with Russia and would return a sample from the Martian moon Phobos. Other options would be for three small geophysical landers to establish a network to study Mars interior or a small rover to explore a new region of Mars.
A presentation on the NASA MAVEN mission that will study loss of the
atmosphere into space gave the good news that all is well with the craft. It arrives at Mars on September 21st
this year.
The Europeans and Russians will not have the only mission to Mars in
2016. NASA’s InSight geophysics station
will launch that year to study the interior of Mars. The lander also will carry a capable weather
station to enable scientists to determine the influence of temperature and
winds on its measurements. The InSight mission
has always planned to carry a camera to aid in instrument deployment, with one
panorama planned early in the mission.
The project will attempt to replace the currently planned black and
white camera with a color camera, but there are no promises. The mission development is proceeding well
and the team has received permission to start hardware development following an
in-depth review of the design.
The InSight Mission will greatly enhance our understanding of the interior or Mars. Credit: M. Golombek, B. Banerdt, JPL/Caltech |
The focus for the two meetings, though, was NASA’s 2020 rover. Like the Curiosity rover currently on Mars,
the 2020 rover will pursue the question of whether Mars could have hosted life
in the past (or even in the present). While the Curiosity rover does that only with
the scientific instruments it carried to Mars, the 2020 rover also will select
and cache 25+ rock and soil samples that could be returned to Earth for study
with much more sensitive instruments in terrestrial laboratories.
Credit: B. Ehlmann, JPL/Caltech |
NASA plans to build and fly the 2020 mission for just half the cost of
the Curiosity mission, adjusted for expected inflation. The need to collect samples and control costs
will ripple through portions of the mission plans. (An additional new goal, to gather
measurements and test hardware that would be useful to a future human mission
will also drive some changes.)
One portion of the mission that will be familiar will be the design of
the rover and the hardware that delivers it to Mars. NASA believes that up to 90% of the Curiosity
mission’s design (by mass) can be reused (which enables a highly capable
mission at bargain price). Some changes
will fulfill the new mission requirements (for example, the caching hardware)
and others will apply lessons gained in operating Curiosity (for example,
beefier wheels after Curiosity’s showed unexpected early wear).
The instrument suite the 2020 rover will carry is likely to be substantially
different than Curiosity’s. Curiosity
carries instruments that both can make quick measurements to rapidly assess the
geology of a location and a highly capable laboratory that can make detailed
measurements. The latter, though, is
costly both in dollars and in the time needed to make the measurements. In almost two years of operation, Curiosity
has collected just three samples for its laboratory instruments. In that same time for the 2020 mission,
scientists want to fill most or all of their cache. As a result, the 2020 rover may carry only
rapid assessment instruments in addition to its caching system (although
technology advances may mean that some will be much more capable than their
Curiosity equivalents). NASA is
expected to announce the instrument selection this July.
The desire to cache samples also is leading scientists to prize the
diversity in evaluating landing sites. Scientists
want its samples to represent the broadest range of ancient environments and
processes as possible. While almost half
of the Martian crust is older than 3.7 billion years when life might have
formed (compared to less than 1% for the Earth), many of those locations would
provide limited diversity within the range a rover could explore. (Many also would be unsafe to land at.)
At the end of the landing site workshop, the participants held a straw
vote to indicate which sites they found most compelling. The winner, located on the northeast edge of the
plains of Syrtis Major, illustrates the diversity they would like to find. Within a few kilometers, this site provides
access to samples that record key stages of Mars’ early evolution:
- Blocks of rocks hurled from nearby massive impacts record the early bombardment of the terrestrial planets by comets and asteroids. These are also convenient samples of the ancient crust delivered from outside the landing zone.
- Ancient crust with minerals preserving the record of the early wet environments of Mars that may have provided conditions for life to develop or at least that record biotic precursors. The NE Syrtis Major site has an unusually wide range of aqueous minerals that suggest a diversity of environments that came and went across millions of years as the climate dried out.
- A nearby volcanic flow represents the massive volcanism that covered large areas of the planet in its early history. These rocks could record the chemistry of Mars’ ancient mantle, provide clues on when Mars’ ancient magnetic field shut down, and in terrestrial laboratories provide unambiguous dating of a wide-scale event to calibrate dating of Mars’ early history.
Location of the proposed NE Syrtis Major landing site. Credit: J. Mustard, Brown University |
At this point, NASA is not looking to rule out any of the nearly thirty
sites that have been proposed. While the
NE Syrtis Major site won the initial beauty contest, other sites may prove to
be more desirable with further analysis.
While NASA doesn’t need to select the 2002 mission’s landing site until
2019, two factors are pushing it to evaluate sites early. One is that high resolution mapping of the
sites for geologic sites and landing hazards requires the sharp-eyed cameras of
the Mars Reconnaissance orbiter. That
spacecraft reached Mars in 2006, and NASA wants to make maximum use of it while
it remains healthy and has an adequate fuel supply.
The mission’s engineers also want an early look at the most desirable
landing sites to determine whether the 2020 rover will need a significant
upgrade in its landing system. The
closest the mission’s operators currently can target the lander is to an ellipse
25 by 20 kilometers. A simple design
change can reduce that ellipse area by 40%.
Unfortunately, the richest sites for exploration often don’t have the
smooth surfaces needed to ensure a safe landing within their landing ellipses. The Curiosity rover, for example, will spend
more than two years getting from its safe landing site to the starting point
for its actual target area.
(Fortunately, there’s been great science along the way.)
For the 2020 mission, NASA would like to avoid another long road trip
at the start of the mission. If the
sites of greatest interest turn out to turn out to have hazards, then NASA will
consider a technology called Terrain Relative Navigation (TRN). With TRN, the landing system will compare
images taken during the final descent against a stored map of safe landing zones. It will then steer the landing to one of
those safe harbors. Without TRN, a mission
to the NE Syrtis Major site, for example, has an 87% chance of a safe landing;
with TRN the chance of safe landing increases to over 98%. However, the TRN technology would be
expensive to develop and test. NASA
wants to know that it is likely to be needed before committing to it for a
mission that’s already being done on a bargain budget.
The two meetings showed that despite an incredible run over the last couple of decades, for Mars the
best may still be to come.
I am very pessimistic about the 2018 rover due to Russia providing the entry, descent, and landing system.
ReplyDeleteMy credulity is unable to comprehend this occurrence actually taking place. In other words, the 2018 rover, if it even gets off the ground, will almost certainly fail upon arrival at Mars. Why? A most dismal track record of Russian interplanetary space craft failures. I find it all but impossible to believe that the relevant Russian design bureaus can actually deploy and sustain the requisite levels of development and testing to enable such EDL technologies to come to fruition. Speechless that ESA could even entertain the notion.
ESA does very good engineering. I suspect they will provide considerable assistance to Roscosmos. This may be the opportunity for Roscosmos to overcome their past problems. ESA engineers certainly know this is an area of risk and are working to reduce that risk.
ReplyDeleteAlso, Roscosmos is designing lunar landers that may give them a leg up.
Map the Dark Streaks. Leave sensors or observatories that can give real time knowledge of when they are happening or about to happen, and have mission ready to go to tunnel/burrow into their subterranean source. As far as I'm concerned, the rest of Mars is just aging sci-enthuasists too old to relearn and lobby for ice moon missions and exo-Earth observatories to find earths on other stars.
ReplyDelete"Russia will fabricate the lander's metal structure and heat shield, supply the descent module's braking rockets and build the separation systems required to open the system's aerodynamic shell before landing, according to Jorge Vago, ESA's ExoMars project scientist." The other key systems will come from Europe.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.space.com/21902-europe-russia-exomars-mars-missions.html
Don't forget India's MOM!
ReplyDelete