The ExoMars rover is ready to leave for Mars… all that remains is to find a launcher for it

The fate of the ExoMars rover is played out in

In the search for a form of martian life extinct, even in activity, ExoMars is one of the most ambitious missions ever carried out. Especially because the rover Rosalind Franklin is endowed with a drill that would have allowed her to explore the martian basement to a depth of two meters. Would have… because due to the conflict between Ukraine and Russia, the European Space Agency has suspended its space cooperation with Roscosmos, a major partner of the program. Result, while the mission was to be launched at the end of September 2022 aboard a Russian Proton, the rover will remain on the ground and hibernate until its next launch date. It will be stored in the Turin factory of Thales Alenia Space, project manager from the program.

It is in this context that two planned reviews, the mission’s System Qualification and the Flight Acceptance Review, were nevertheless carried out. In particular, to ensure the state of readiness of the rover and that it was ready to be transferred to its launch site, to Baikonur in Kazakhstan. As a result, all the lights are green. ExoMars 2022 could have taken off for Mars, starting September 20, 2022.

Since 2018, the ExoMars rover has struggled to take off

Remember that the mission failed both Windows previous firing ranges, those of 2020 and 2018. It was therefore important for theESA, Thales and Airbus to ensure that the causes of these two postponements had been corrected. These reviews also made it possible to ensure that the rover could hibernate for several years before joining the planet Mars.

I hope our Member States will decide that this is not the end of ExoMars, but rather a rebirth of the mission, perhaps serving as a trigger to develop a greater autonomy european says David Parker, Director of Human Exploration and robotics at ESA. A statement to recall that in ESA jargon, ExoMars is an optional mission, meaning that each Member State decides which optional programs it wishes to participate in and the amount of its contributions to each of these programs. Unlike ESA’s mandatory space science activities, if insufficient funding, optional missions are likely to be abandoned.

In a few weeks, the European Space Agency should make public the conclusions of the studies undertaken, or the lines of thought, on the future of ExoMars and in what configuration and on what date the mission could be launched.

ExoMars: the search for life on Mars will still have to wait…

Article of Remy Decourt published on 03/20/2022

For its mission to Mars, the European Space Agency will do without the Russians. It will therefore not be launched before 2026, the time to find alternatives to the participation of Russia, which notably provided the landing platform for the rover and the launcher.

Following its Council meeting, the European Space Agency (ESA) took several decisions following the end of space cooperation with Russia. The most anticipated concerned the fate of the ExoMars 2022 mission, which provided for the launch of a rover in September, aboard a Russian Proton launcher.

Unsurprisingly, and to comply with the sanctions taken against Russiathe Council decided to postpone its launch and to initiate a study to find alternatives to what the Russians were to provide within the framework of this partnership which, it should be remembered, also included ExoMarch 2016. Dmitry Rogozin, the head of the Russian space agency Roscosmos, said he regretted this decision and underlined, with some confidence, that Russia could carry out this mission on its own within a few years…

ESA Council meeting, held on 16 and 17 March 2022 in Paris – media briefing. © ESA

The very, very uncertain 2024 shooting window

The launch date is therefore postponed and ExoMars new version could take off only in 2026, or even 2028. Indeed, it is unlikely that Thales Alenia Space, prime contractor for the program, and its industrial partners, including Airbus, will be able to to replace Russian equipment, including the landing platform and the software flight in just under two years.

At the next Council, in four to five weeks, the European Space Agency should specify its wishes and the possible alternatives.

As for the other missions, which were to be launched by the Russian Soyuz, they are all suspended. These are two satellites intended for the European constellation of localization Galileothe scientific mission Euclid and the European-Japanese mission ofearth observation EarthCARE.

We will keep you informed.

Mars: the fate of the ExoMars rover will be decided in a few days

Article by Rémy Decourt published on 05/03/2022

Due to the geopolitical context, the sanctions of the European Union and the very strong deterioration of relations with Russia, the launch of the ExoMars mission, in which Russia is heavily involved, scheduled for September 2022 is made very unlikely. The European Space Agency should decide the fate of this mission and the alternatives available to it during its Council scheduled for March 15 and 16.

the way of the cross continues for the ExoMars mission. After ExoMars 2018, ExoMars 2020 then ExoMarch 2022, will the European Space Agency be forced to rename its flagship program again? 2024, or even much later if the ESA takes a radical decision!

If the postponement of 2018 was explained by delays in European and Russian industrial activities, as well as in the deliveries relating to the scientific payload, that of 2020 was due to elements related to the probe such as the parachutessolar panels, Russian electronic equipment and the development of flight software.

As the probe was due to take off in April to reach its launch site, the European Space Agency said on February 28 that due to sanctions imposed on Russia following the invasion of Ukraine, the launch in September 2022 seems very unlikely.

The first large-scale cooperation between ESA and Roscosmos

To understand this statement, it is necessary to know that the ExoMars program is carried out in close collaboration with Russia which had in a way saved the program after the withdrawal of the Nasa. At the time, in 2012, the Russian Space Agency joined the program by providing the Proton launchers and scientific instruments for the 2016 and 2022 missions, as well as for the ExoMars 2022 rover, the Kazachok landing platform equipped with 13 scientific instruments which are not all Russian.

During its Council, scheduled for March 15 and 16, the European Space Agency should review the alternatives available to it as to the follow-up to be given to this program. If a two-year postponement is the least painful and least restrictive solution for the program, it seems unlikely to us that ESA will decide to “go it alone”. This is explained by the very high level of involvement and participation of the Russian Space Agency Roscosmos in the program. On March 16, we will be set on the fate of ExoMars.

Fortunately for ESA, all the elements of the probe are currently in the Turin factory of Thales Alenia Space. Imagine the diplomatic headache if ExoMars 2022 were in Russia!

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