. 24/7 Space News .
Alcatel Alenia Space Starts The Exomars Mission Design

Illustration of ExoMars descending to surface of Mars.
by Staff Writers
Paris, France (SPX) Feb 01, 2006
In the frame of a contract signed with the European Space Agency (ESA), Alcatel Alenia Space has started the ExoMars mission design. The ExoMars mission aims at sending a lander rover to Mars in order to find traces of past or present life.

This contract, worth about 13 million Euros, calls for one year mission design work up to the preliminary design review including the definition of the main system elements of the mission.

ExoMars is the first robotic exploration mission to be developed within the European space exploration program Aurora. Aurora objectives are to create and implement a European long-term plan for the robotic and human exploration of the solar system as well as to search for life beyond the Earth.

The ExoMars program, commissioned by ESA for a budget of about 600 million Euros, is one of the most important exploration missions in the near future. Scheduled to be launched from Kourou in 2011, the ExoMars mission will enable exobiology studies. The mission will collect new information on Mars environment to prepare future human explorations.

In the scope of the mission design work, Alcatel Alenia Space consolidates the mission objectives, defines the system elements, as well as the Rover Operations Control System and Mission Exploitation System concept.

Vincenzo Giorgio, Director for Optical Observation & Science programs from Alcatel Alenia Space in Italy said: "We are pleased that ESA Council has decided to go ahead with the Aurora program and its first mission ExoMars. This mission, like Huygens, represents a great challenge to both the space industry and Alcatel Alenia Space, paving the way for future Mars missions."

Having a successful track record in this domain, Alcatel Alenia Space is ready to take on this challenge due to a number of complementary skills, from the ability to coordinate international alliances in long-term endeavours, to the assembly, integration and testing of scientific probes, through the proven expertise in the technologies needed for space astronomy and interplanetary missions with landings including deep space telecommunications.

Related Links
ESA Telecom specialist site



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Inside Rocks, Implications For Finding Life On Mars
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Feb 01, 2006
UCLA paleobiologist J. William Schopf and colleagues have produced 3-D images of ancient fossils - 650 million to 850 million years old - preserved in rocks, an achievement that has never been done before.







  • Russia Hopes To Launch Reusable Spacecraft In 2012
  • Ashes Of US Space Pioneer To Launch With Remains Of 'Star Trek' Actor
  • US Remembers Fallen Astronauts 20 Years After Challenger Disaster
  • ISRO Achieves Breakthrough In Supersonic Combustion Technology

  • Alcatel Alenia Space Starts The Exomars Mission Design
  • Inside Rocks, Implications For Finding Life On Mars
  • Opportunity Takes Microscopic Images, Collaborates With Mars Express
  • Spirit Nears Home Plate

  • Sea Launch Departs Home Port For EchoStar X Mission
  • Kazakh Telecom Satellite To Be Launched In June
  • Arabsat 4A Delivered To Baikonur
  • Japan H2 Heavy Lofts Disaster Monitoring Satellite

  • Airborne And Sat Radars Record Frascati Grape Harvest
  • Landsat 5 Resumes Operations
  • Raytheon And SGI Tech Process NOAA'S GOES-R Sats Data
  • Japan's ALOS In Orbit: ESA Will Deliver Its Data To European Researchers

  • New Horizons Successfully Performs First Post-Launch Maneuvers
  • On The Road To Pluto At Last
  • The PI's Perspective 24 Hours After Launch: It Worked!
  • LockMart Thermoelectric Generator Powers NASA Pluto New Horizons Probe

  • Two Exiled Stars Are Leaving Our Galaxy Forever
  • Dissecting Stardust
  • Cartwheel Galaxy Makes Waves In New NASA Image
  • Astronomers Detect Largest Cluster Of Red Supergiants

  • The Smell Of Moondust
  • SMART-1 To Crash Into Lunar Surface In August
  • Russia Plans Mine On The Moon By 2020
  • Jack Skis The Moon

  • Putin And Ivanov Discuss Future Of GLONASS System
  • EADS Space To Play Central Role In Galileo Sat Nav Test
  • ESA, Galileo Industries Seal Deal For First 4 Galileo Sats
  • GLONASS To Have 18 Satellites In Orbit In 2008

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement