July 2020 is a crowded month for Mars missions. It
feels like everyone is going to the red planet!
One of which is the Emirates Mars Mission that will be making history in more ways than one.
And time is of the essence.
The team has a limited launch window.
And if they miss it, they’ll have to wait
until 2022.
But when it does get there, the mission could
provide us with the most comprehensive picture
of the Martian atmosphere yet.
This is the first time we're doing a deep
space mission.
The fuel that's needed for such a mission,
the communication delays that you will get,
it makes it really complex
to be able to operate and work on.
In fact, the Emirates Mars Mission will be
the first interplanetary one for the Arab
world.
And it’s quite impressive considering that
the country’s national space program only
started in 2006.
In order to get the project off the ground,
the team worked with a handful of U.S. institutions,
including University of Colorado, Boulder and
UC Berkeley.
And while just getting to Mars is a feat in
itself, the team has also set their sights
on better understanding the Martian atmosphere,
with three main objectives in mind.
One: Characterize the Martian lower atmosphere. So we want to know and characterize the climate,
how it changes for the whole Martian year.
And then we would like to characterize the
exosphere of Mars, so especially looking at
hydrogen and oxygen as they are escaping
Mars.
And then we want to achieve the link between
them.
Now the Martian atmosphere is still somewhat
of a mystery to us, but that's where the UAE’s
probe Hope comes in.
Recording day and night for one martian year,
or roughly two Earth years, Hope will paint
an unprecedented picture of the Martian atmosphere.
The previous missions they looked, let's say
at a point on Mars at 3:00 PM every day.
Like they had a good image of that.
But what we're doing is we're getting that
full picture and what it looks like within
the full Martian day.
And we're able to achieve that by basically having a different orbit than the rest of the missions.
We're studying a whole day on Mars rather
than a specific time.
And Hope’s elliptical orbit is quite unique,
ranging about 20,000 km to 43,000 km from
the Martian surface and taking the probe about
55 hours to complete.
The small car-sized probe will be equipped
with three instruments.
First, there’s the Emirates Mars InfraRed
Spectrometer which is a thermal infrared camera
capturing data on the lower atmosphere, measuring
the global presence of ice clouds, dust, temperature,
and water vapor.
Then there’s the Emirates Mars Ultraviolet
Spectrometer, that will study the levels of
carbon monoxide and oxygen in the thermosphere,
while also gathering data on oxygen and hydrogen
levels in the exosphere.
And finally there’s the Emirates eXploration
Imager that will take the pretty pictures
of Mars, capturing high-res photos of the
planet.
On top of that, it will survey the lower atmosphere
by analyzing the ozone, among other measurements.
But the Emirates Mars Mission team had to
face a couple of unique challenges.
First, they were up against a limited launch
window and then the global pandemic hit.
But they persevered.
A typical mission when it comes to Mars,
they take minimum 10 years to be developed
while we're doing it only for six years.
There is no way that a mission this big, this
complex to be done the same way as the typical
10 year.
We have to change the way that we're doing
things in terms of managing projects and making
sure that we're achieving every milestone
that we need to.
So we don't miss our launch date because we
have this requirement that we need to be
there before December, 2021.
And you may be wondering why December 2021?
Well, when the mission was first announced,
the government set a non-negotiable deadline
for the probe to get the red planet by 2021, in order to coincide with the UAE’s 50th anniversary.
So the pressure is on.
Now after roughly six years of hard work,
the launch is just around the corner.
The Hope probe will launch from Japan, hitching
a ride on an Mitsubishi H-2A rocket.
Hope will take seven months to get to Mars,
and once there, it will check if all its instruments
are functioning.
Once systems are all good to go, the probe
will begin its wider elliptical orbit gathering
data for one full Martian year.
And the team can’t wait for the results.
The first thing I think that every team member
would like to see is just the first image
of Mars, that we are there.
That's I believe like our celebration.
And then after that, I would like to see the
data.
The data that will come out of this probe,
it would be freely distributed to everyone
who is interested.
Whatever accomplishments, the scientific data
that we would get, we want to share with everyone.
When I sit back and think about, "Yeah,
we're doing a big thing here, it's a big deal,
not just for the country itself, but for the
region as well."
And that is the main objective, or main goal
of this mission is to give hope, and that
was the name, to the new generation, to the
young generation around the country, around
the region as well.
CTA: To learn more about another mission heading
to Mars, check out this episode on NASA’s
Perseverance rover.
Is there another mission you’d like to see
us cover, let us know in the comments below.
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