Fact Sheet
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Launch date: |
02-Jun-2003 17:45 UT |
Mission end: |
Nominal mission completed after 1 martian year (687 Earth days) in Mars orbit. Currently in the seventh extended mission till 31 December 2020, with the eighth extension also approved up to 31 December 2022. |
Launch vehicle: |
Soyuz-Fregat |
Launch mass: |
1223 kg |
Mission phase: |
Operational |
Orbit: |
- Orbital Inclination: 86.9°
- Pericentre: 330 km
- Apocentre: 10 530 km
- Period: 7 h 00 m
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Achievements: |
- Revealing the planet geology and surface age
- Investigation of ancient water related landforms and processes
- Mapping the surface and polar caps composition, including hydrated minerals
- Unveiling the planet history
- Investigation of the subsurface structure, including polar caps
- Discovery of liquid water underneath the polar caps
- Continuous monitoring of the meteorological parameters
- Tentative detection of methane
- Unambiguous detection of CO2 clouds
- Monitoring of the ionosphere and its variability
- Discovery of localised auroras
- Quantifying the ion escape and its dependence on solar wind and EUV flux
- Measurements of the current rate of atmospheric escape and assessment of total loss over the planet history
- Mapping Phobos in unprecedented detail
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Mars Express, so called because of the rapid and streamlined development time, represents ESA's first visit to another planet. Since launch in 2003, the mission has produced a range of significant results in its search for answers to fundamental questions about the geology, atmosphere, surface environment, history of water, and potential for life on Mars. The spacecraft built on previous work by borrowing technology from the Mars 96 mission (which had failed to reach Earth orbit) and from ESA's Rosetta mission (currently accompanying comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in its orbit around the Sun). Mars Express also paves the way for future exploration as a part of a communications infrastructure for other missions.
Mission Name
Mars Express is so called because it was built more quickly than any other comparable planetary mission. The Beagle-2 lander was named after the ship in which Charles Darwin sailed when formulating his ideas about evolution.
Spacecraft
Mass & Power Budget
Spacecraft Item |
Mass at Launch |
Spacecraft Bus |
439 kg |
Lander |
71 kg |
Payload |
116 kg |
Propellant |
427 kg |
Launch Mass |
1223 kg |
Typical Mean Power Demand |
Observation |
Manoeuvre |
Communication |
Spacecraft |
270 W |
310 W |
445 W |
Payload |
140 W |
50 W |
55 W |
Total |
410 W |
360 W |
500 W |
Dimensions
Spacecraft bus dimensions |
1.5 × 1.8 × 1.4 m |
Thrust of main spacecraft engine |
400 N |
Attitude thrusters |
8 at 10 N each |
Propellant tanks volume |
2×270 = 540 litres |
Pointing accuracy |
Better than 0.05° |
Power Source
Solar array area |
11.42 m² |
Lithium batteries |
3 at 22.5 Amp hour each (at launch) |
Thermal Specification
Spacecraft bus |
10-20 °C |
PFS, OMEGA |
-180 °C |
Thermal blanket |
Gold-plated AISn alloy |
Orbit
Mars Express was launched from the Fregat upper stage towards Mars with an absolute velocity of 116 800 km per hour and a velocity relative to the Earth of 10 800 km per hour. On 19 December 2003, 5 days before orbit insertion, the Beagle-2 lander was successfully released towards the surface of the planet. However, no further contact was made with the lander and it was subsequently declared lost. (In January 2015, the UK space agency announced that the lander has been identified in images from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. The images appeared to show the lander partially deployed on the surface.) On 25 December 2003 the orbiter underwent a successful orbit insertion manoeuvre and after slow orbit adjustments it reached the operational orbit.
Nominal Operational Orbit Parameters
- Orbital inclination - 86.9°
- Apocentre - 10 530 km
- Pericentre - 330 km
- Period - 7 h 00 m
- Observational phase at pericentre - about 1 hour
- Communications phase - 6.5-7.0 hours minimum
Operations Centre
The European Space Operations Control Centre (ESOC) in Darmstadt communicates with the spacecraft via the ESA New Norcia ground station in Perth, Australia. The spacecraft sends housekeeping data on instrument temperatures, voltages and spacecraft orientation, for example, and science data. The ground station sends control commands to the spacecraft. Scientific data is stored onboard using the 12 Gbit solid state mass memory prior to the downlink to Earth.
Last Update: 3 November 2020