Mars Express / Beagle 2

 

Mars Express [Astrium] 

Beagle 2 (Mars Express Lander) [ESA]

The Mars Express mission's main objective is to search for sub-surface water from orbit and drop a lander on the Martian surface.

Mars Express Orbiter

Seven scientific instruments onboard the orbiting spacecraft will perform a series of remote sensing experiments designed to shed new light on the Martian atmosphere, the planet's structure and geology.

Beagle-2 Lander

The lander, called Beagle 2 after the ship in which Charles Darwin set sail to explore unchartered areas of the Earth in 1831, is an exciting opportunity for Europe to contribute to the search for life on Mars. After coming to rest on the surface, Beagle 2 will perform exobiology and geochemistry research.

The instruments on the arm's PAW (Position Adjustable Workbench) include 

As well as its science objectives, Mars Express will also provide relay communication services between the Earth and landers deployed on the surface by other nations, thus forming a centre piece of the international effort in Mars exploration. 

Mission

Both Mars Express and Beagle-2 arrived on 25. December 2003 on their destination, but while Mars Express was successfully inserted into a Mars orbit, no signal from the Beagle 2 lander has been received.

  

Nation: Europe
Type / Application: Mars orbiter, Mars lander (Beagle 2)
Operator: ESA
Contractors: Astrium
Equipment:
Configuration:
Propulsion: S400
Lifetime:
Mass: 1042 kg
Orbit: Heliocentric, then Mars orbit

 

Satellite Date LS   Launcher Remarks:
Mars Express (MEX) 02.06.2003 TB LC-31 Soyuz-FG Fregat with Beagle 2
   Beagle 2 (Mars Express Lander) 02.06.2003 TB LC-31 Soyuz-FG Fregat with Mars Express

 

Last update: 27.09.2009
Contact: gunter.krebs@skyrocket.de
© Gunter Dirk Krebs