2 minute read time.
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Recently the Aerospace, Robotics & Mechatronics and Satellite Systems & Applications Networks came together to organise an evening seminar as part of World Space Week.  The title of the event was ‘Mars  and the UK – Yesterday and Tomorrow’.



Speakers Abbie Hutty and Ed Chester two UK space professionals involved in Mars exploration missions outlined a number of technical challenges, including:



§  sending a spacecraft to Mars and landing on the surface 

§  gave an overview of Mars exploration to date and detail the UK's contributions to it 

§  discussed the Beagle-2 (the 2003 British Mars spacecraft thought lost but discovered in January this year to have actually landed successfully) 

§  discussed the ExoMars (the 2018 European astrobiology mission being built in Stevenage and to which the UK is second-largest financial contributor). 



Some facts from the two presentations:

  • Beagle 2 was the UK’s first attempt at a Mars Landing

  • HiRISE camera imagery found probable images of Beagle 2 on Mars in 2006

  • Several of Beagle 2’s systems all deployed successfully

  • ExoMars Rover Mission will be Europe’s first attempt to put a rover on Mars

  • Key design drivers for a Mars Rover are low temperatures, harsh radiation, dust, landing, driving and inorganic (planetary protection)

  • 1 Mars year equates to 687 earth days

  • Rover Landing has to cope with 10-15g impact, 300kg mass and -85C temperatures.

  • ExoMars will navigate autonomously

  • The Rover drill will be capable of drilling down two metres below Mars surface, first time a drill of this size has been taken to another planet

  • Water was first detected on Mars in 2002 as subsurface hydrogen




To find out more about why we explore Mars click here to view a video filmed at the UKSpace Conference 2015 

and one on Beagle 2 and ExoMars.