Asset Publisher

Schiaparelli with thrusters on

Schiaparelli with thrusters on


Date: 20 June 2016
Satellite: Schiaparelli
Copyright: ESA/ATG medialab

This artist's impression depicts Schiaparelli, the ExoMars entry, descent and landing demonstrator module, just after the thrusters have ignited.

On 19 October, Schiaparelli will enter the Martian atmosphere at an altitude of about 121 km and a speed of nearly 21 000 km/h. At first it will be slowed down by the increasing atmospheric drag, until at roughly 11 km above the surface, the module's speed will have decreased to 1700 km/h and a supersonic parachute will be deployed by a mortar. Then, 40 seconds later, after oscillations have died down, the front shield of the aeroshell will be jettisoned.

The parachute will slow Schiaparelli to around 240 km/h at about 1.2 km above the surface and then the rear cover will be jettisoned.

After this the braking system will be activated – 3 clusters of 3 thrusters – to slow the module until it is 2 m from the surface at which stage the thrusters will cut out and the module will fall freely to the surface.

Further details of the entry, descent and landing sequence can be found here.

Last Update: 1 September 2019
23-Apr-2024 12:52 UT

ShortUrl Portlet

Shortcut URL

https://sci.esa.int/s/WXJpdDA

Related Images

Related Videos

Related Publications

Related Links

See Also

Documentation