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ESA Bulletin Number 98
ESA's Mars Express Mission
- Europe on Its Way to Mars
R. Schmidt et al.
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- ESA's exciting and fast-track Mars Express mission is the first of the
new flexible (F) missions, which are based on a new implementation
scenario to maintain overall mission cost below a very stringent cost
cap. The key features of an F-mission are streamlined management,
up-front definition of the payload, and the transfer of more
responsibility to industry. The cost ceiling is 175 MEuro for future F-missions,
but only 150 MEuro for Mars Express. The scientific objectives
of the mission include the remote and in-situ study of the surface,
subsurface, atmosphere and environment of the planet Mars. ESA's
Science Programme Committee preliminarily approved Mars Express
in November 1998, provided sufficient funding would be available, and
gave its full approval on 19 May 1999.
- The selection of the scientific payload for Mars Express was
completed in early May 1998 whilst the spacecraft design was still
undergoing competitive feasibility studies. Towards the end of 1998,
Matra Marconi Space (MMS) was chosen as Prime Contractor for the
entire spacecraft procurement programme. The payload is composed
of seven instruments and a lander, Beagle 2, to search for traces of life
on Mars. Beagle 2 is currently only confirmed until the end of this year
and its continuation is subject to the agreement of a financial and
technical plan by the end of 1999.
- ESA's aim is the implementation of a top-class mission at a much
lower cost than hitherto achieved. Significant savings will be made by
purchasing recurrent systems from ESA's Rosetta mission. A
compressed implementation schedule, a new relationship between
ESA, industry and the scientific community, and the exploitation of
synergies between the ground operation systems of Rosetta and Mars
Express will help the latter to stay within the allocated budget.
- The launch by a Soyuz/Fregat must take place within an eleven-day
launch window opening on 1 June 2003.
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