NASA Advances Mars Exploration With Artemis II Tests, New Missions, and Recovery Efforts
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On March 16, Space.com reported NASA refusing to abandon the silent MAVEN orbiter, lost since December 2025 after emerging from Mars' far side. Director Louise Prockter stated during the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, "We're still looking for it," with efforts including the Green Bank Observatory and Curiosity rover skyward scans yielding no signal post-solar conjunction. Other orbiters like Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter are picking up relay slack.
Fresh updates from March 14 highlight NASA's ESCAPADE twin spacecraft, launched November 2025 and now fully operational per NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. Positioned at Sun-Earth L2, these probes will arrive at Mars in 2027 to measure solar wind stripping the atmosphere, revealing why the planet turned barren and aiding future astronaut protections.
The European Space Agency is adapting too. AIAA's Aerospace America noted in a recent briefing that with U.S. Congress zeroing Mars Sample Return funding, ESA eyes repurposing its Earth Return Orbiter for a new Mars atmospheric mission to enable heavier landings, while prioritizing the 2028 Rosalind Franklin rover launch.
Looking ahead, NASASpaceflight and The Debrief outline 2026 launches: NASA's ESCAPADE en route, JAXA's MMX targeting Phobos sample return by 2031 in the November window, and SpaceX Starship demos potentially sending uncrewed stages to Mars.
These developments underscore a pivotal era, blending recovery efforts with bold ventures to unlock Mars' secrets.
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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