Donald Savage
Headquarters, Washington                   December 3, 2003
(Phone: 202/358-1547)

Jocelyn Landau Constantin
ESA, Darmstadt, Germany
(Phone: 011/49-6151-90-26-96)

Guy Webster
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
(Phone: 818/354-6278)

RELEASE: 03-388

MARS MISSIONS HAVE INTERNATIONAL FLAVOR

     A European Space Agency (ESA) mission that will arrive at 
Mars this month has American participants, and Europeans are 
team members for two NASA spacecraft that will reach Mars in 
January.

ESA's Mars Express and NASA's twin Mars Exploration Rovers 
will examine the red planet in quite different and 
complementary ways. "Together, these missions can provide a 
range of new information about Mars that neither could provide 
alone," said Dave Lavery, program executive for the Mars 
Exploration Rovers and for NASA's participation in Mars 
Express at NASA Headquarters, Washington. "Historically, there 
have been only three successful landings on Mars. In the span 
of only one month, we may double that number, and our 
knowledge of Mars may increase even more," he said.

Mars Express is expected to release part of its payload, the 
Beagle 2 lander, on Dec. 19. On Christmas Eve (in U.S. time 
zones), Beagle 2 will parachute to the Martian surface, and 
Mars Express will enter orbit around the planet. Beagle 2 will 
use analytical tests and a robotic arm to search for evidence 
of past or present life at its landing site. The orbiter will 
use seven instruments to study Mars' atmosphere, structure and 
geology. The science teams for Beagle 2, and for every 
instrument on Mars Express, include U.S. researchers. Two 
instruments on Mars Express have components from U.S. partners 
in the mission.

The Beagle 2 team plans to use NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter to 
relay communications to Earth on the lander's arrival day and 
in subsequent weeks.

The U.S. role in Mars Express includes navigational support 
and software developed from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory 
(JPL), Pasadena, Calif. and communications support from the 
JPL-managed Deep Space Network, which operates antenna 
stations in California, Spain and Australia. One of the Mars 
Express instruments, with U.S. components, will use radar to 
seek evidence of underground water, either frozen or liquid.

"This will be the first attempt to study layers far below 
Mars' surface," said JPL's Dr. William Johnson, manager for 
the instrument, which was built under the leadership of Dr. 
Giovanni Picardi, University of Rome, La Sapienza. The 
instrument, the Mars Advanced Radar for Subsurface and 
Ionosphere Sounding, is designed to discern boundaries between 
layers as deep as 5 kilometers (3 miles) under the surface. It 
will also examine the structure and variability of the Martian 
ionosphere, the top layer of the atmosphere. The University of 
Iowa, Iowa City, built the transmitter for the radar 
instrument. JPL built the receiver. Astro Aerospace, 
Carpinteria, Calif., built the 40-meter (131-foot) antenna. 
Italy provided the instrument's digital processing system and 
software and integrated the parts.

The other Mars Express instrument with key NASA-funded 
components is the Analyzer of Space Plasma and Energetic 
Atoms. It will examine interactions between the Martian 
atmosphere and the solar wind of charged particles speeding 
away from the sun. Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio, 
Texas, built two sensors for it, an electron spectrometer and 
an ion mass analyzer.

Europe provided important tools on NASA's twin Mars 
Exploration Rovers. The German Space Agency (DLR) and the Max 
Planck Institute for Chemistry, Mainz, Germany, supplied each 
rover's alpha particle X-ray spectrometer instrument. DLR and 
the University of Mainz supplied the Mossbauer spectrometer. 
The Neils Bohr Institute, Copenhagen, Denmark, supplied the 
magnet array for observation by rover cameras. Plans call for 
Mars Express to relay signals from a NASA rover at least once. 
In addition, Europeans make up about one-sixth of the members 
of the rovers' science team. The rovers, scheduled to land on 
Mars on Jan. 3 and on Jan. 25 (Eastern time zone) 
respectively, will seek evidence about whether the environment 
in two regions might once have been capable of supporting 
life.

For information about NASA, visit: http://www.nasa.gov

For information about Mars Express visit:
http://sci.esa.int/home/marsexpress; about its radar
experiment, visit: http://www.marsis.com

For information about the Mars Exploration Rovers, visit:
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mer

Mars Express is managed by the 15-nation ESA science and 
technology center at Noordwijk, Netherlands. JPL, a division 
of California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, manages the 
Mars Odyssey and Mars Exploration Rover missions for NASA's 
Office of Space Science, Washington.


-end-


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