
The Perseverance rover takes a look back at its tracks across the surface of Mars.
(Image credit – NASA/JPL-Caltech)
The Perseverance rover takes a look back at its tracks across the surface of Mars.
(Image credit – NASA/JPL-Caltech)
NASA Science Mission Directorate head Thomas Zurbuchen reported on Monday
According to Zurbuchen, a single lander that could carry both vehicles would have departed too far from established technologies, introducing unacceptable risk. He said the revised architecture would push the mission’s target launch date from 2026 to 2028, but did not indicate how the changes might affect the mission’s cost. He did note, though, that MSR will reach its next development milestone in June, at which point NASA is required to provide a revised cost estimate.
The MSR news follows ESA’s announcement
Unlike ExoMars, which is already built, MSR is still in its earliest phase of design and was not yet formally committed to a particular mission architecture. However, NASA has been intent on solidifying the mission’s design quickly, in view of costly disruptions that afflicted prior flagship missions when significant technical risks were allowed to persist into later phases of the development process.
To keep tabs on MSR’s progress, NASA set up an independent review board (IRB) in 2020. In its first report
Concerning the mission’s overall cost and schedule, the IRB questioned NASA’s optimism at that time, arguing the agency’s planned launch date in 2026 was “not compatible” with acceptable risk levels for a mission of MSR’s scale and importance. Noting the mission’s cost was still a “moving target,” the IRB further suggested the figure of about $3 billion NASA was using for planning purposes was too low and that development costs were likely to amount to between $3.8 billion and $4.4 billion.
The question of whether the mission would require one or two landers was already the subject of an ongoing study when the IRB conducted its review. The board cited the uncertainty surrounding the lander architecture as a key factor behind its advocacy for a higher overall cost estimate and a less aggressive schedule and recommended NASA place a strong emphasis on resolving the issue.
MSR is following in the wake of a series of stunning successes NASA has recently chalked up on Mars. Earlier this century, the twin Spirit and Opportunity rovers exceeded their design lives by many years, and the Curiosity rover, which launched in 2011, continues to operate.
A year ago, the Perseverance rover landed in Mars’ Jezero Crater, an area once covered in water, and it has already cached 10 samples for MSR to retrieve. The Ingenuity helicopter, which arrived with Perseverance, has completed 22 flights. Having long since transcended its status as a technology demonstration mission, it is now actively assisting
Experience gained with these prior missions has allowed NASA to develop confidence in its technological approaches for robotic Mars exploration, including its “sky crane”
Zurbuchen cited this point in presenting the new plans for MSR, observing, “A large single-lander architecture would require a wider payload launch vehicle fairing to accommodate a wider entry heatshield diameter; unproven entry, descent, and landing capabilities; and electric propulsion on the cruise stage. … The dual-lander architecture builds off Perseverance success and can be completed in the 2020s.”
NASA will be responsible for building both landers, and it recently selected
Outlining a revised mission schedule NASA has worked out with ESA, Zurbuchen noted that with both landers launching in 2028, the retrieved samples are expected to arrive back at Earth in 2033. As before, ESA’s orbiter is slated to launch in 2027.
A slide showing the revised architecture and schedule for the Mars Sample Return mission.
(Image credit – NASA)
ESA’s last attempt to conduct a surface mission on Mars ended in failure when its Schiaparelli lander crashed on arrival
The next available opportunity for a short trajectory to Mars was this fall, and the rover and the Roscosmos-built landing platform were set to meet it without difficulty, launching from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. However, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine put an end to that possibility.
ESA explained, “As an intergovernmental organization mandated to develop and implement space programs in full respect with European values, we deeply deplore the human casualties and tragic consequences of the aggression towards Ukraine. While recognizing the impact on scientific exploration of space, ESA is fully aligned with the sanctions imposed on Russia by its member states.”
At a press conference
Addressing future plans, senior ESA official David Parker said the mission could potentially launch in 2024 should a resumption of cooperation with Roscosmos become possible. However, if the mission is reconfigured to replace Russian contributions, it would have to wait for launch opportunities in 2026 or even 2028.
Aschbacher noted it is possible ESA could turn to the U.S., which backed out
Today, NASA Planetary Science Division Director Lori Glaze affirmed ESA and NASA are conducting a “joint assessment of options for the ExoMars mission.”