UK invests ?1.7 million

Jun 22, 2006 08:13 GMT  ·  By

ExoMars is the first mission in European Space Agency's Aurora program of planetary exploration and it's slated for launch in 2011. It will explore the Red Planet with a suite of sophisticated instruments and it will seek clues to the existence of past or present life. Now the Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council (PPARC) has announced an investment of ?1.7 million in R&D to enable UK scientists and engineers to develop key instrumentation and technologies for the ExoMars mission.

ExoMars will explore the Martian surface with a mobile rover and a stationary science module. ExoMars will: - Search for traces of past and present life at, and near, the Martian surface - Characterize Martian geo-chemistry and water distribution at various locations - Increase knowledge of the Mars environment and geophysics - Identify potential hazards before landing other robotic spacecraft, or - in the longer term - humans.

PPARC's investment is focused on instruments and technology in which the UK has a proven and recognized track record, building on the heritage from Beagle 2 technology and missions such as Mars Express and Huygens. The 9 funding awards will develop areas which the UK considers to be critical, enabling academia and industry to develop flight-ready technology in time for the ExoMars mission.

The awards will allow: - The Rover to explore the surface - The Life Marker Chip to search for organic materials - The Panoramic Camera to map the planet in 3D - The X-ray Diffractometer to study the geology of Mars - The Microseismometer to search for Marsquakes - The Atmospheric Experiment Package to develop the wind sensor element - The UV-VIS spectrometer to look at the radiation that reaches Mars - Entry, Descent and Landing systems technology to safely deliver the spacecraft to the surface - Fluid Inertial Simulation - to model parachute behavior on Mars.

"Mars Express has, and still is, delivering outstanding science from orbit around the Red Planet," said Professor Keith Mason, CEO of PPARC. "It has revealed some amazing facts about Mars and even more amazing images - but we have unfinished business on the surface. To really understand the mysteries of Mars we need ground-truth data and ExoMars will deliver that with the rover and base station."

"The UK is already the second largest financial contributor to the Aurora programme in Europe - confirmation that we intend to be a major player," Mason added. "This latest PPARC funding will position our scientists and engineers to win leading roles in instruments and technology in the first mission, ExoMars."

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