News on Mars-missions
- 3D model of the Mars rovers completed
- Mars orbiter 10 years anniversary
- Mission to search for life on Saturn-moon proposed
- Planned NASA/European Mars-mission InSigth
- New images of old Mars-lander
- Food and diet for a Mars-mission
- Mars rover begins 9th year of Mars work
- Russian Mars probe crashes
- Mars rover to spend winter at 'Greeley Haven'
- Mars-bound rover begins research in space
- Euopean autonomous Mars-rover being developed
- European scientist play key-role
- No new contact with Russaian Phobos-Grunt spacecraft
- Curiousity heading for Mars
- The Curiosity rover's journey to Mars
- Launch for Mars Science Lab saturday
- Car-sized Mars rover ready for launch nov 25
- Curiosity rover could conclude the water question
- Microbe risk when rover wheels hit Martian dirt
- Epic search for life heats up with focus on new high-tech
- Mars-rover approaches large crater
- NASA announces news briefing on Mars science findings
- Landing site selected for next Mars-rover
- NASA will soon decide on where to land
- The long jorney of the curiosity rover to Mars
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Airplanes could unlock some of Mars mysteries
Friday, 15 October 2010 13:10
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| Spaceflight - Mars-missions |
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ARES, which stands for Aerial Regional-Scale Environmental Surveyor, is Levine’s brainchild. He has now formed a team of 250 people, from airplane designers to mission planners to bring his vision of a robotic airplane soaring above Mars to fruition. The team has built and tested a prototype ARES airplane and they are gearing for the next NASA Mars mission solicitation. The ARES airplane prototype is 5m long, with a wingspan of about 6,5m, and is made of a lightweight polymer-carbon composite material. It would be packed with its tail and wings folded into an aeroshell similar to the one that brought the rovers to Mars. NASA chose the Langley Research Center team to lead the effort, with Levine as the project scientist for the mission. The project was cancelled later that year for budgetary reasons, but he has since been convinced that an airplane was the way to go for Mars exploration. Indeed, Levine says ARES’ fuel would only last for a two-hour flight. But in that time it could cover close to 1500 kilometers, and after its fuel is depleted, the airplane should be able to land on the ground and continue making measurements. Besides, he stresses, airplanes would be the most reliable way to observe the planet’s rugged southern region where a rover would find it difficult if not impossible to drive. Source: NASA Astrobionet |




Various orbiters, landers and rovers that have explored Mars in the past three decades have revealed tantalizing evidence of the conditions for life, from frozen water at the planet’s North Pole to methane plumes in the atmosphere. These evidence has made the case for flying an airplane over Mars stronger than ever. 
ARES would take samples of the Martian atmosphere every three minutes, helping to pinpoint the exact source of the methane plumes that have been discovered on the planet — methane on Earth is produced by living systems, but its point of origin on Mars remains a mystery. Equipped with the right instruments, the airplane also could study subsurface water and probe the ground for telltale signatures of life.