Mars, Here We Come!

5. Future Probes to Mars (2001 version)

The three primary goals of future Mars explorations are

  1. the search for evidence of life, past or present,
  2. understanding long-term climatic change on Mars,
  3. surveying the planets natural resources, assessing in particular their utility for future explorations.
The current epoch of exploration started in 1996 with the Mars Pathfinder and Mars Global Surveyor. The next group of probes includes the 2001 Mars Odyssey (launched December April 7, 2001 and scheduled for arrival at Mars on October 24, 2001). Future probes include Mars Express, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, a Long-Range Orbiter, Scout Missions, and a sample return mision.

(a) 2001 Mars Odyssey

2001 Mars Odyssey is an orbiter carrying three scientific instruments designed to make global observations of Mars to improve our understanding of the planet's climate and geologic history, including the search for liquid water and evidence of past life. The mission will extend across a full Martian year, or 29 Earth months.

Odyssey's primary science mission will take place January, 2002 through July, 2004. For the first time, the mission will map the amount and distribution of chemical elements and minerals that make up the Martian surface. The spacecraft will especially look for hydrogen, most likely in the form of water ice, in the shallow subsurface of Mars. It will also record the radiation environment in low Mars orbit to determine the radiation-related risk to any future human explorers who may one day go to Mars. All of these objectives support the four science goals of the Mars Exploration Program.

The three primary instruments carried by 2001 Mars Odyssey are:

(b) Mars Exploration Rovers

In 2003, two powerful new Mars rovers will be on their way to the red planet. With far greater mobility than the 1997 Mars Pathfinder rover, these robotic explorers will be able to trek up to 100 meters (about 110 yards) across the surface each Martian day. Each rover will carry a sophisticated set of instruments that will allow it to search for evidence of liquid water that may have been present in the planet's past. The rovers will be identical to each other, but will land at different regions of Mars.

These rovers will land in a method similar to that of the Mars Sojourner Rover. However, these larger rovers will carry all their instruments with them. These rovers will be able to travel almost as far in one Martian day as the Sojourner rover did over its entire lifetime. Rocks and soils will be analyzed with a set of five instruments on each rover, and a special tool called the "RAT," or rock abrasion tool, will be used to expose fresh rock surfaces for study. Each rover has a mass of nearly 150 kilograms (about 300 pounds) and has a range of up to 100 meters (about 110 yards) per sol, or Martian day. Surface operations will last for at least 90 sols, extending to late May 2004, but could continue longer, depending on the health of the vehicles.

(c) Mars Express


NASA is participating in a mission planned by the European Space Agency and the Italian space agency called Mars Express, which will explore the atmosphere and surface of Mars from polar orbit. The spacecraft will carry a science payload with some heritage from European instruments lost on the ill-fated Russian Mars '96 mission, as well as a communications relay to support lander missions. Mars Express will itself carry a small lander as well.

The mission's main objective is to search for sub-surface water from orbit and deliver a lander to the Martian surface. Seven scientific instruments onboard the orbiting spacecraft will study the Martian atmosphere, the planet's structure and geology.

The lander is called Beagle 2 after the ship in which Charles Darwin set sail to explore unchartered areas of the Earth in 1831. After coming to rest on the surface, Beagle 2 will perform exobiology and geochemistry research.

(d) 2005 and Beyond

2005 Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter: In 2005, NASA plans to launch a powerful scientific orbiter, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. This mission will focus on analyzing the surface at new scales in an effort to follow tantalizing hints of water detected in images from the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft, and to bridge the gap between surface observations and measurements from orbit. For example, the Reconnaissance Orbiter will measure thousands of Martian landscapes at 20- to 30-centimeter (8- to 12-inch) resolution, good enough to observe rocks the size of beach balls.

Smart Lander and Long-range Rover: NASA proposes to develop and to launch a roving long-range, long-duration science laboratory that will be a major leap in surface measurements and pave the way for a future sample return mission. NASA is studying options to launch this mobile science laboratory mission as early as 2007. This capability will also demonstrate the technology for "smart landers" with accurate landing and hazard avoidance in order to reach what may be very promising but difficult-to-reach scientific sites.

Scout Missions: NASA also proposes to create a new line of small "Scout" missions which would be selected from proposals from the science community, and might involve airborne vehicles (e.g., airplanes or balloons) or small landers, as an investigation platform. Exciting new vistas could be opened up by this approach either through the airborne scale of observation or by increasing the number of sites visited. The first Scout mission launch is planned for 2007.

Sample Return and Other Missions: In the second decade of the century, NASA plans additional science orbiters, rovers and landers, and the first mission to return samples of Martian rock and soil to Earth. Current plans call for the first sample return mission to be launched in 2014, and a second in 2016. Options that would significantly increase the rate of mission launch and/or accelerate the schedule of exploration are under study, including launching the first sample return mission as early as 2011. Technology development for advanced capabilities such as miniaturized surface science instruments and deep drilling to hundreds of meters will also be carried out in this period.


Goto Section 5 - Future Probes to Mars (1999 version).

Goto Section 6 - Mars: The Specs.