Skip to main content

ExoMars mission delay means no launch until at least 2022

The ExoMars rover mission has been delayed until 2022, ending hopes of a launch this summer.

Recommended Videos

The European Space Agency (ESA) and Russia’s Roscosmos space agency said in a message posted on Thursday, March 12, that it needs more time to complete all of the necessary tests on its spacecraft and related equipment. For example, it wants to perform additional testing on the all-important parachutes designed to slow the descent of the rover as it enters Mars’ atmosphere at speeds of up to 13,000 mph. Several other issues with hardware and software also need to be resolved.

Unsurprisingly, the coronavirus is also impacting preparations “because people from different places of industry in Russia, in Italy, and France cannot move easily as in the past,” ESA director general Jan Wörner told reporters this week.

This is the second major delay in the project’s lifetime after the originally planned 2018 launch date slipped to 2020 due to various issues.

Similar to NASA’s upcoming Mars 2020 mission, the ExoMars mission goals include finding out if life of some form or another ever existed on Mars, and to better understand the history of water on the Red Planet. The ExoMars rover (below) — named Rosalind Franklin after the pioneering DNA scientist — includes a miniature life-search laboratory and a drill to access the subsurface of Mars.

A revised timeline (below) from ESA and Roscosmos shows a planned launch window from August through October 2022, with the rover arriving on the Martian surface between April and July 2023.

ExoMars Rosalind Franklin rover
The ExoMars Rosalind Franklin rover. ESA/Roscosmos

Roscosmos director general Dmitry Rogozin said in a statement that the decision to postpone the mission by two years was “difficult but well-weighed,” while Wörner commented: “We want to make ourselves 100% sure of a successful mission. We cannot allow ourselves any margin of error. More verification activities will ensure a safe trip and the best scientific results on Mars.”

Counterparts from across the pond expressed understanding, with NASA associate administrator Thomas Zurbuchen, for one, calling it a “tough decision” considering the complex challenges presented by such a mission, adding that the team was “inspiring everyone to do hard things.”

When it finally reaches Mars, the rover will join the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO), which has been performing scientific research since entering Mars’ orbit in October 2016, and which will also function as a communication link for the ExoMars rover when it finally arrives. It’s perhaps worth noting that the TGO mission’s Schiaparelli lander crashed on the Martian surface after a sensor malfunction during descent in 2016, an incident that is no doubt at the forefront of the minds of the current ESA/Roscosmos team.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
NASA may have to dig deeper for evidence of life on Mars
Rocks inside Mars' Jezero Crater.

A team of NASA scientists has suggested that Mars rovers may have to dig deeper than first thought to give them the best chance of finding evidence of ancient microbial life on the distant planet.

Recent research carried out by the team found that cosmic rays from the sun degrade small molecules such as amino acids -- the fundamental building blocks of life -- at a much faster rate than expected. The existence of certain amino acids is key in scientists' quest to prove that microbial life once existed on Mars.

Read more
NASA’s Psyche mission launch delayed until at least 2023
huge solar arrays mammoth space voyage psyche spacecraft asteroid

NASA's mission to visit a metal asteroid with a spacecraft named Psyche has hit a roadblock, with the launch being delayed until 2023 at the earliest. The mission had been scheduled to launch this summer, with a launch window opening on August 1, but issues with the spacecraft software mean it won't be possible to make this window now.

In May, there were technical problems unearthed with the spacecraft during testing, with NASA confirming that it would push the planned launch back until September 2022. NASA has since said that the problem arose from "a compatibility issue [which] was discovered with the software’s testbed simulators."

Read more
Moon, Mars, and more: NASA extends 8 planetary missions
NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO).

NASA has decided to extend a range of active planetary science missions, a move that’s certain to delight scientists attached to the projects.

The space agency said the spacecraft -- the oldest of which launched more than 20 years ago -- had been selected to continue their operations because of their “scientific productivity and potential to deepen our knowledge and understanding of the solar system and beyond.”

Read more