The Mars graveyard simply welcomed one other corpse.
On Wednesday (June 3), NASA formally declared its MAVEN orbiter useless, closing the guide on a extremely profitable mission that studied the Crimson Planet’s environment for almost a dozen years.
The MAVEN staff did not script this ending; the orbiter went darkish with out warning this previous December, and it remained silent despite repeated attempts to hail it. But MAVEN’s ultimate fate would have been roughly the same even if its handlers had been able to shut it down in a controlled fashion.
“The nominal plan for disposing of the spacecraft at the end of its mission was just to leave it in that nominal orbit, where it would remain for a period of 50 to 100 years before entering the Martian atmosphere,” MAVEN Project Manager Mike Moreau, of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, said during a press conference on Wednesday.
“So, the spacecraft’s basically in a configuration, in an orbit, that’s very similar to what it would have been if the mission had ended nominally,” he added.
And that’s what happens to dead Mars orbiters: They generally keep circling for a half-century or more, until the planet’s thin atmosphere drags them down and burns them up. Or the end could come considerably sooner, if they’re unlucky enough to slam into one of their brethren or into Phobos or Deimos, the two moons of Mars. (Indeed, MAVEN had to perform a maneuver in February 2017 to avoid a potential collision with Phobos.)
A few of these probes might have already got been pulled down, contemplating the lengthy timeline of Mars exploration. Here is a quick rundown of the orbiter missions which have efficiently arrived on the Crimson Planet up to now:
- Mariner 9 (NASA; arrived November 1971)
- Mars 2 (USSR; November 1971)
- Mars 3 (USSR; December 1971)
- Mars 5 (USSR; February 1976)
- Viking 1 (NASA; June 1976)
- Viking 2 (NASA; August 1976)
- Phobos 2 (USSR; January 1989)
- Mars World Surveyor (NASA; September 1997)
- Mars Odyssey (NASA; October 2001)
- Mars Specific (European Area Company; December 2003);
- Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, or MRO (NASA; March 2006)
- Mars Orbiter Mission (India; September 2014)
- MAVEN (NASA; September 2014)
- ExoMars Hint Gasoline Orbiter, or TGO (ESA; October 2016)
- Emirates Mars Mission, or Hope (UAE; February 2021)
- Tianwen 1 (China; February 2021)
Solely Mars Odyssey, Mars Specific, MRO, TGO, Hope and Tianwen 1 stay operational at present, that means the orbital graveyard has as much as a dozen our bodies in it. (It is robust to trace unresponsive spacecraft in Mars orbit, so we usually do not know which useless ones are nonetheless aloft.)
There is a Mars graveyard on the floor, too. Among the many many robots being buried by the wind-blown crimson grime are NASA’s Spirit and Alternative rovers, Ingenuity helicopter and Pathfinder lander (which Mark Watney finds and makes use of within the guide and film “The Martian“), and Zhurong, a rover that was a part of China’s Tianwen 1 mission.
Simply two Mars floor craft stay operational at present: NASA’s Curiosity and Perseverance rovers, which landed in August 2012 and February 2021, respectively.
However let’s finish with an appreciation of MAVEN (whose identify is brief for “Mars Ambiance and Risky Evolution”). The probe’s information has helped scientists higher perceive Mars’ dramatic transition from a comparatively heat and moist world to the frigid desert we all know at present.
That change occurred as a result of Mars misplaced most of its once-thick environment. (The planet’s air is now simply 1% as dense as that of Earth at sea stage.) Because of MAVEN, we all know that loss was pushed by the photo voltaic wind and occurred between 4.2 billion and three.7 billion years in the past — across the time that life was getting began right here on Earth.

