. 24/7 Space News .
ESA Awards The First Aurora Mission Design Contracts

The ExoMars mission, to be launched in 2009, is the first of the major Flagship missions in the Aurora programme. It includes an orbiter and a descent module that will land a large (200 kg), high-mobility rover on the surface of Mars. After delivery of the lander/rover, the ExoMars orbiter will also operate as a data relay satellite between the Earth and the vehicle on the Martian surface.

Paris (ESA) Oct 01, 2003
A major milestone in ESA's long-term Aurora programme of Solar System exploration has been passed with the announcement of the winners of competitive contracts for two of the programme's key robotic missions - ExoMars and Earth re-entry Vehicle Demonstrator (EVD).

A major milestone in ESA's long-term Aurora programme of Solar System exploration has been passed with the announcement of the winners of competitive contracts for two of the programme's key robotic missions - ExoMars and Earth re-entry Vehicle Demonstrator (EVD).

Alenia Spazio (Italy), Alcatel Space (France) and EADS Astrium (France) are heading the three industrial teams selected to carry out a full mission design for ExoMars, the Aurora exobiology mission to Mars.

At the same time, two industrial teams, headed by EADS LV (Launch Vehicles) of France and Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL) of the United Kingdom respectively, have been selected for the pre-development phase (officially known as Pre-Phase A) of the EVD mission.

"Following the Invitations To Tender (ITTs) for these contracts, issued in April-May 2003, there was an overwhelming and enthusiastic response from industry," said Bruno Gardini, Aurora Project Manager.

"We were delighted by the number and the excellence of the proposals received," he added. "It was also pleasing to see that many of them included new, innovative ideas from industry."

ExoMars
The ExoMars mission, to be launched in 2009, is the first of the major Flagship missions in the Aurora programme. It includes an orbiter and a descent module that will land a large (200 kg), high-mobility rover on the surface of Mars. After delivery of the lander/rover, the ExoMars orbiter will also operate as a data relay satellite between the Earth and the vehicle on the Martian surface.

The primary objective of the ExoMars rover will be to search for signs of life, past or present, on the Red Planet. Additional measurements will be taken to identify potential surface hazards for future human missions, to determine the distribution of water on Mars and to measure the chemical composition of the surface rocks.

Three parallel Phase A studies for the ExoMars Mission will be carried out by industrial teams that include companies from ESA member states and Canada:

Alenia Spazio (Italy) with subcontractors OHB (Germany), GMV (Spain), SEA (UK), SSC (UK) and Laben (Italy). Alcatel Space (France) with subcontractors Deimos (Spain), ETCA (Belgium), Fluid Gravity Engineering (UK), Kayser Threde (Germany), Laben (Italy), MD Robotics (Canada), NGC Aerospatiale (Canada), QinetiQ (UK), Vorticity (UK). EADS Astrium (France) with subcontractors Astrium Ltd. (UK), EADS LV (France) and SAS (Belgium).

The contracts cover the design of the entire ExoMars mission, from launch, through the long interplanetary voyage to the landing of the rover on the planet.

"This is an exciting landmark for the Aurora programme, since these are the first contracts dedicated to mission development rather than technical studies," said Gardini.

"With the participation of all major European aerospace companies, the proposed concepts will make the best use of their extensive experience, gathered over many years, in the design and development of interplanetary missions," he said.

The studies will also bring to fruition several years of efforts from national and international programmes in investigating and planning Mars missions.

"From the quality of the proposals, the agency is very confident that the technical baseline will be fully consolidated by the end of the Phase A studies and that the spacecraft design will then be defined to a level of detail commensurate with a prompt start of Phase B."

Depending on the availability of funding, the Phase B studies for ExoMars are planned to start in 2004.

Earth re-entry Vehicle Demonstrator (EVD)
The second Aurora Flagship mission is a Mars Sample Return (MSR), planned for 2011. Its main goal will be the retrieval of rock samples from the Martian surface and subsurface for subsequent analysis in laboratories on Earth.

In order to ensure the success of this challenging mission, a number of new technologies will have to be developed and tested. Conceived as a small, technology-driven Arrow-class mission, the Earth re-entry Vehicle Demonstration will be used to validate the design of the small MSR capsule that will bring back the precious samples of Martian soil.

The EVD is expected to be launched in 2007. The baseline mission foresees the insertion into a highly elliptical Earth orbit of a small spacecraft carrying a re-entry capsule. In order to reproduce the final phase of a typical Mars return mission, the capsule will then carry out a ballistic re-entry into Earth's atmosphere at speeds of up to 45,000 km/h.

Two industrial teams have been selected for the parallel EVD mission Pre-Phase A studies. The concept presented by the industrial team, under the leadership of EADS LV (France) with the participation of OHB System (Germany) and Plansee (Austria) is solidly based on the experience of past projects.

The industrial team led by SSTL (UK), a company well known for its experience in small highly integrated spacecraft, has devised a very innovative concept well adapted for a small technology mission. The participation of highly specialised companies, Fluid Gravity Engineering (UK), Kayser Threde GmbH (D) and Vorticity Ltd. (UK) ensures an excellent coverage of the mission's most critical technologies.

"The expectations are for highly competitive and exciting Pre-Phase A studies," said Gardini.

The next Aurora contract for Phase A studies will concern the Mars Sample Return mission. Industrial proposals were submitted on 1 August and the evaluation is nearly completed. The names of the selected companies are expected to be announced in early October.

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



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


All nine members of NASA space flight security panel resign
WASHINGTON (AFP) Sep 23, 2003








  • Burt Rutan "On Track" For Dec 17 Flight As 100th Anniversary Of Aviation
  • Lance Bass Returns to Houston to Launch World Space Week
  • Say Goodbye To Your Mouse, Keyboard And Phone Number
  • NASA Wants You To Be A Solar System Ambassador

  • MSSS Adds Another 10,000 Surveyor Images To Database
  • What Iron Can Tell Us about Mars
  • Webcasts Feature Scientists On A "Mars Mission"
  • Early Mars Was Frozen - But Habitable: Part II

  • ILS To Launch Third HISPASAT Bird
  • ILS To Launch SES Americom Broadband Bird Next Year
  • Rocket Propellant Leak Occurs During Titan 4 Operation
  • Atlas V Launches Rainbow 1 Satellite

  • Post-Earthquake Reconnaissance Benefits Identified
  • DigitalGlobe Awarded in Excess of $500 Million NextView Contract From NIMA
  • Ball Aerospace To Build DigitalGlobe's NIMA Bird
  • Envisat Radar Altimetry Tracks River Levels Worldwide

  • Pluto Mission May Be Early Victim Of Growing Budget Crisis
  • Pluto Mission May Be Early Victim Of Growing Budget Crisis
  • Pluto Mission May Be Early Victim Of Growing Budget Crisis
  • Atlas V Chosen To Launch New Horizons Mission

  • Did A Gamma-Ray Burst Devastate Life On Earth?
  • Waiting For A Supernova
  • Gamma-Ray Bursts: Are We Safe?
  • Berkeley Payload On Korean Satellite To Be Launched By Russian Sept 26

  • SMART-1 Ion Engine Fired Successfully
  • SMART-1 leaves Earth on a long journey to the Moon
  • SMART-1: The First Spacecraft Of The Future
  • SMART-1 ready for launch

  • Trimble To Acquire 3D Laser Scanning Company MENSI
  • Trimble Unveils Mini GPS Timing Module
  • US Air Force B-2 Bomber Drops 80 JDAMS in Historic Test
  • Trimble Launches New Era in GPS Surveying

  • 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