Posted on 01/04/2004 8:40:37 AM PST by blam
Still no sign of missing Beagle
Beagle 2 vanished during landing
Beagle 2's mothership will begin searching for the missing probe in the next few days. Mission scientists said on Sunday that further attempts to contact the British-built lander had failed.
They are pinning their hopes on the European Space Agency's (Esa) Mars Express, which will be in position to look for its "baby" on Wednesday.
The news came as the US space agency Nasa celebrated the safe landing of its Spirit rover on the Red Planet.
It sent back images of the rocky, barren surface of Mars within hours of landing.
In contrast, Beagle touched down on Mars on Christmas Day but never sent back a radio signal to say it had survived the landing.
High stakes
Spirit is larger and more complex than Beagle 2, which weighed only 60 kg and cost less than a tenth of the £545m budget for the rover and its twin, Opportunity.
Beagle scientists are now focusing on two main reasons for the lack of contact besides the "disaster scenario".
NASA TRIUMPH
First pictures from the Martian surface In pictures: Jubilation at Nasa
A software glitch or a problem with the probe's receiver or transmitter could explain Beagle's silence as well as the growing possibility that it was destroyed on landing.
Suggestions that communications equipment on the US Mars Odyssey orbiter might not be functioning were put to rest on Sunday when a signal was received from Spirit.
Mission manager Dr Mark Sims refuses to put numbers on the prospects of finding Beagle alive.
"I'm not a betting man," he told a news conference in London.
"We'll go through the whole process and only when we've ruled out all the options will we give up.
"We will keep going with Mars Express and with Beagle 2 for as long as we can."
The earliest opportunity to listen for a signal with Mars Express will take place between 1130 GMT and 1400 GMT on 7 January.
There are further planned communications sessions up to mid-January.
"Our intention is that we really, really make a full out attempt on the 7 [January]," said Professor Colin Pillinger, Beagle 2 lead scientist.
Fate unknown
If nothing is heard from Beagle via Mars Express, the fate of the craft may never be known.
Hi-tech cameras on Mars Express and the Nasa orbiter Mars Global Surveyor may be able to spot signs of its parachutes. But Professor Pillinger admitted this would be like looking for a needle in a haystack.
"If we find a parachute, we'll know that [Beagle] arrived within six kilometres of the planet's surface [intact]," Dr Sims told BBC News Online.
If Beagle 2 survived the journey to the surface, and is able to communicate, it should begin calling home five times every hour on Monday.
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Maybe it just doesn't know anyone in Europe it wants to talk to.
Have they ever heard of "You get what you pay for"?
Snoopy, Phone Home!
Eastern Standard Time?
Maybe they can send the rover Spirit over to take a few photos of the impact site and debris.
Yup, got it on the NASA channel. Continuing good news.
I believe the word we're searching for, but are afraid to say, is "textbook."
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