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BBC News Online: Sci/Tech


Wednesday, 2 February, 2000, 13:14 GMT

Earth turns its ears to Mars


Jodrell Bank
European radio scientists are to join the hunt for the Mars Polar Lander (MPL) which has been missing since it entered the atmosphere of the Red Planet on 3 December last year.

It shows that Mars is something that captivates everyone's imagination
Richard Cook, MPL project manager

Many suspect the probe was destroyed but after additional processing, two small blips were noticed in data collected on 18 December and 4 January by the 45-metre (150-foot) radio dish at Stanford University.

The blips suggested MPL may still be alive.

Fresh commands were sent to Mars last week ordering the lander to get in touch with Earth. Although a return signal was not detected, mission managers at Nasa intend to widen its search.

Now, other radio telescopes around the world have offered to help in the search for MPL. These include the 76-metre (250-foot) antenna at Jodrell Bank, near Manchester, UK, an array of fourteen 25-metre (82-foot) antennas at Westerbork in The Netherlands, and an array located near Bologna, Italy.

International community

"The international community has shown a real interest in being involved in our search. We appreciate their efforts and I think it shows that Mars is something that captivates everyone's imagination," said Richard Cook, project manager for MPL at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in California, US. Stanford
New commands will be sent to the lander from Nasa's Deep Space Network around the clock on Tuesday and Wednesday this week. These commands will essentially tell the spacecraft, if it is functioning, to reset its clock and send a signal to Earth. On 4 February, windows will open for the antennas in The Netherlands, the UK and Italy to begin listening.

Mars is currently about 300 million kilometres (181 million miles) from Earth and it will take about 16 minutes for a signal to pass between the two worlds.

Even if MPL is found, Nasa says there is no hope of rescuing the mission to do any useful science. A successful hunt could, however, throw up useful information that might benefit later missions to the Red Planet.


Related to this story:
Nasa waits on new Mars search (27 Jan 00 | Sci/Tech)
Nasa ends search for Mars probe (17 Jan 00 | Sci/Tech)
Nasa to scan Mars for lost probe (14 Dec 99 | Sci/Tech)
Mars probe silence signals failure (07 Dec 99 | Sci/Tech)
Mars: Mission impossible? (06 Dec 99 | Sci/Tech)
Mars 'wake up call' for Nasa (08 Dec 99 | Sci/Tech)
Mars 2 - Earth 0 (06 Dec 99 | Sci/Tech)
Orbiter loss blamed on 'silly mistakes' (11 Nov 99 | Sci/Tech)


Internet links: Mars Polar Lander | Exploring Mars | Jodrell Bank |
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