ESAHome
   
Space Science
About Space ScienceESA's 'Cosmic Vision'Science & Technology in-depth
Multimedia
Science imagesScience videosAnimationsDownloadsSounds from space
Media centre
Press ReleasesPress kitsESA Television
Resources
Reference sectionGlossaryFAQs
Science missions
Services
HelpLegal disclaimerCommentsSubscribe
Follow us
RSS feedsESA Sci on Twitter
 
 
 
Bookmark and Share
 
 
 
 
 printer friendly page
Farewell, Beagle 2
Farewell, Beagle 2
19 December
 
2003: on 19 December 2003, ESA's Mars Express released its Beagle 2 lander and set it on a trajectory for a landing on Mars.
 
At 9:31 CET, a sequence began to separate the Beagle 2 lander from Mars Express. A pyrotechnic device was fired to slowly release a loaded spring, which gently pushed Beagle 2 away from the mother spacecraft. An image from the on-board visual monitoring camera showed the lander drifting away.

On Christmas Day 2003, ESA's Mars Express successfully arrived in orbit around Mars. In early January, the Beagle 2 lander had still not yet signalled its safe landing.

By February 2004, Beagle 2 had failed to communicate since its first radio contact was missed after it was due to land on Christmas Day. The Beagle 2 Management Board met in London on 6 February and, following an assessment of the situation, declared Beagle 2 lost.  
 

 
 
Today in space history
18 December17 December16 December15 December14 December13 December12 December
Related links
A history of European space science
 
 
 
   Copyright 2000 - 2012 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.