New Mars Forums

Official discussion forum of The Mars Society and MarsNews.com

You are not logged in.

Announcement

Announcement: As a reader of NewMars forum, we have opportunities for you to assist with technical discussions in several initiatives underway. NewMars needs volunteers with appropriate education, skills, talent, motivation and generosity of spirit as a highly valued member. Write to newmarsmember * gmail.com to tell us about your ability's to help contribute to NewMars and become a registered member.

#1 2015-03-22 20:49:23

SpaceNut
Administrator
From: New Hampshire
Registered: 2004-07-22
Posts: 28,747

MARSDROP another mini mission ride along

The Martian frontier could open up with new mission concepts

A new mission concept could bring previously unaccessible Martian landing sites within reach, say its creators at the Planetary Science Institute (PSI). This could mean landings in vast canyons, on dormant volcanoes or other locations that rovers can't reach.

The concept is called MARSDROP and it would tag along with a bigger, primary Martian mission. The vehicle would be tiny—adding less than 5% to the cost of a major mission—and would provide more landing opportunities for a single Mars shot, PSI added.

To get to the surface, MARSDROP would use an aerodynamic feature called a parawing, which would give it better steering capabilities than traditional parachutes. The design calls for MARSDROP to reach a target within a few tens of meters, should its video navigation work as planned.

“In addition, MARSDROP can help lay the groundwork for future human exploration of Mars by characterizing biohazards like Martian dust and assessing the availability of key resources, such as water from which oxygen and rocket propellant can be made," stated Rebecca Williams, a senior research scientist at PSI who is working on the project.

MARSDROP, if it were to go forward, would only be about 30 centimeters in diameter and weigh one kilogram, which would force instruments to be small and efficient. But in that small space, scientists are proposing to pack on cameras, microscopes and other instruments that could search for signs of organic materials (the building blocks of life) or tell us more about the Martian surface, for example.

the-martian-frontier-could-open-up-with-new-mission-concepts_1426850974.jpg


Mentioned in another topic that is along the same idea is NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory is proposing a "Mars helicopter" that could act as a scout for rovers, looking for the best areas to explore.

Offline

#2 2015-05-18 19:40:20

SpaceNut
Administrator
From: New Hampshire
Registered: 2004-07-22
Posts: 28,747

Re: MARSDROP another mini mission ride along

Hang Gliders on Mars: Innovative Idea to Land Probes on Red Planet

An innovative concept for tiny probes attached to gliders could one day allow small robots to explore intricate locales on Mars that probes never could reach before, scientists say.  '

The project, called MARSDROP, would send two landers to the Red Planet as hitchhikers aboard a larger spacecraft. The landers would then detach and use a steerable parawing to glide the miniature probes (called "microprobes") down to the surface of Mars. '

The wild concept is the brainchild of Rebecca Williams, a senior scientist with the Planetary Science Institute, who collaborated with Matthew Eby from the Aerospace Corporation and a team of engineers led by Robert Staehle at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. [The Best (and Worst) Mars Landings of All Time]'

A prototype version of the MARSDROP re-entry vehicle has already been tested, according to a project description. Using terrain-relative video navigation, scientists could steer microprobes to within tens of meters of a desired landing spot. The probes' small size and precise landing let them explore parts of Mars that larger land rovers like NASA's Curiosity can't reach. That includes Martian canyons, fresh impact-crater sites, volcanic regions and glaciers. '

"What is particularly exciting about this new approach is the possibility of landing in new locations like the canyons in Valles Marineris or at modern geologically active sites such as south-polar geysers or locations with inferred seasonal release of surface water flows," Williams said in a statement. '

The microprobes would carry a suite of instruments — like cameras, weather sensors, seismometers and microscopes that can study minerals and inorganic substances — to gather critical data about the surface of Mars needed before humans can set foot on the planet. The probes could provide scientists with new information about Martian surface geology, monitor surface changes, and search for organics or astrobiologically relevant minerals.  '

"MARSDROP can help lay the groundwork for future human exploration of Mars by characterizing biohazards like Martian dust and assessing the availability of key resources, such as water from which oxygen and rocket propellant can be made," Williams said. '

Another key quality of the MARSDROP mission design is its cost. The concept would only add an estimated 5 percent to the base cost of current Mars missions.'

"MARSDROP is a cost-effective way to double or triple the number of Mars landers for each mission opportunity," PSI representatives wrote in a mission description. '

If MARSDROP is successful, the technology could also be used on planets with atmospheres thicker than Mars, including Venus and Saturn's moon Titan

Offline

Board footer

Powered by FluxBB