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| September 13, 2016 05:53pm ET-
Credit: The Viking Project/NASA
Mars: Home of the Robots
Mars may be a barren desert with no alien life (that we know of), but the Red Planet certainly isn’t lifeless. Thanks to Earth’s ambitious space programs, several robotic scientists explore the Martian surface as well as its skies. Read on to find out about all the spacecraft that are actively exploring Earth’s neighboring planet.
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Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS
Curiosity rover (Mars Science Laboratory)
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Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
MAVEN
NASA’s Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN (MAVEN) orbiter has been circling the Red Planet since 2014. The spacecraft is studying Mars’ atmosphere to help scientists figure out how the planet transitioned from a world that holds water to a barren, desert wasteland. So far, MAVEN has revealed that particles emanating from the sun, or solar wind, stripped Mars of its atmosphere . Additionally, data from MAVEN suggests that about half of Mars’ atmosphere may have been lost to interstellar clouds of gas and dust. When Mars still had all of its atmosphere, the planet was warm enough to retain liquid water. Today, the planet is much colder and drier. [Photos: NASA’s MAVEN Mission to Mars ] -
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Odyssey
NASA’s Odyssey spacecraft has spent more than 15 years orbiting Mars, and the craft continues to hold the record for the longest Mars mission duration in history . The spacecraft arrived at Mars orbit in 2001, where it has been searching for evidence water and ice on the Red Planet. The orbiter’s full name is 2001 Mars Odyssey, after a famous novel written by Arthur C. Clarke in 1968 titled “2001: A Space Odyssey.” With high-power cameras on board, Odyssey keeps a close watch on the Martian weather conditions, like dust storms that could potentially damage rovers on the ground. [Mars Odyssey: Pictures from Longest Mars Mission ] -
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) arrived at Mars in 2006 with a mission to search for evidence that water previously existed on the planet. The orbiter bears the most powerful camera and spectrometer of any spacecraft at Mars. MRO’s six science instruments study the atmosphere and the Martian surface while searching for possible underground deposits of water and ice. These instruments allow MRO to monitor the daily weather on Mars. MRO’s camera also scopes out the Martian surface for potential landing sites for future Mars missions. [Latest Photos from NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter ] -
Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell.
Opportunity (& Spirit)
NASA’s twin rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, launched back to back in the summer of 2003 and landed on Mars by parachute in January 2004. These two robotic geologists both found evidence of ancient Martian environments that contained water and were potentially habitable. Unfortunately, Spirit got stuck in a sand dune and ran out of power in March 2010. But Opportunity is still roving, and it now holds the record for the longest-running Mars rover ever — both in terms of time and distance covered. The rover is beginning to show its age with memory problems, but it’s still exploring the Red Planet nonetheless. [Latest Mars Rover Photos from Opportunity & Spirit ] -
Credit: ESA, C. Carreau
Mars Express
The European Space Agency (ESA) sent its Mars Express orbiter out to the Red Planet in 2003. It was the first time the ESA sent a spacecraft to explore another planet. Mars Express brought along a lander, named Beagle 2, but the little spacecraft didn’t survive its plunge down to the surface. Mars Express carried on without its partner, however. The spacecraft made its first discovery before even getting settled into Mars orbit, spotting water ice on the planet’s south pole. Just a few weeks later, Mars Express found methane on Mars — a sign of active geological processes deep inside the planet, and possibly methane-burping microbes living underground. [Photos: Red Planet Views from Europe’s Mars Express ] -
Credit: ISRO
Mars Orbiter Mission
India’s first interplanetary spacecraft joined the party on Mars in 2014. The Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM), also known as Mangalyaan (meaning “Mars craft” in Sanskrit), arrived at Mars orbit just two days after NASA’s MAVEN orbiter. Officials with the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) have said that the mission was primarily a technology demonstration, but MOM is still doing plenty of science as it whizzes around the Red Planet. The craft’s small,15-kilogram (33 lbs.) payload contains five scientific instruments, including a color camera, for studying Mars’ atmosphere. The spacecraft’s mission was originally planned to end after six months, but the little orbiter is still going strong. MOM could even last long enough to meet its little sister, Mangalyaan 2, which is scheduled to launch in 2020. [India’s First Mars Mission in Pictures ] -
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona/Texas A&M University
A spacecraft graveyard
Mars is littered with dead spacecraft. Some of their missions ended as planned, while others ran out of power, got stuck on Mars’ terrain or were demolished in not-so-smooth landings. About a dozen spacecraft have died on Mars. Pictured here is NASA’s Phoenix lander, which died when it ran out of power during a winter dust storm in 2008. Find out more about the lifeless spacecraft on Mars in this gallery: Mars: The Spacecraft Graveyard .Email Hanneke Weitering at hweitering@space.com or follow her @hannekescience . Follow us @Spacedotcom , Facebook and Google+ . Original article on Space.com .
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