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Second ESCAPADE spacecraft completes key trajectory fix on path to Mars
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Second ESCAPADE spacecraft completes key trajectory fix on path to Mars

by Abbey Interrante
Washington DC (SPX) Jan 07, 2026

NASA's twin ESCAPADE spacecraft are back on a fully synchronized path to Mars after mission controllers successfully carried out a critical trajectory correction maneuver for the second probe on Jan. 6. The burn followed a brief pause in December 2025, when engineers delayed the attempt to investigate low thrust seen during earlier correction efforts on one of the two small satellites.

The latest maneuver fine-tuned the second spacecraft's flight path and completed its pair of early-course corrections, matching the progress of its twin, which wrapped up its two scheduled burns in December as planned. With both vehicles now aligned on their intended cruise trajectories, the mission team can shift focus from anomaly resolution back to long-term navigation and science planning.

Together, the compact orbiters are being steered toward a so-called "loiter" or Earth-proximity orbit around the Sun-Earth Lagrange point 2, a gravitationally balanced region roughly a million miles from Earth. From this vantage, the spacecraft will wait for the optimal planetary alignment before swinging back past Earth in November 2026 for a gravity-assist flyby that will slingshot them onto an efficient interplanetary transfer to Mars.

After the Earth flyby, the ESCAPADE twins are scheduled to arrive at Mars in September 2027 and then transition into their science orbits following a several-month commissioning phase. Operating as a closely coordinated pair, the orbiters will track how the supersonic solar wind - a million-mile-per-hour stream of charged particles from the Sun - buffets the Martian environment and helps strip away the planet's already tenuous atmosphere.

ESCAPADE, short for Escape and Plasma Acceleration and Dynamics Explorers, is designed as a low-cost, high-return heliophysics and planetary mission that uses two identical small spacecraft to probe Mars' space environment from different vantage points at the same time. By flying through the planet's induced magnetosphere and upper atmosphere along complementary paths, the orbiters will measure charged particles, magnetic fields and plasma waves to build a three-dimensional picture of how energy and matter flow from the solar wind into and out of the Martian system.

One of the mission's central goals is to quantify how these processes drive atmospheric escape today, providing crucial context for how Mars evolved from a once warmer, wetter world to the cold, thin-atmosphere planet seen now. Coordinated measurements from two platforms are expected to reveal how quickly conditions change in response to solar activity, such as bursts of energetic particles and magnetic structures carried outward from the Sun.

The recent trajectory correction episode underscores both the challenges and resilience of deep-space navigation for small spacecraft operating far from Earth. While the December 2025 low-thrust event prompted a cautious stand-down and additional analysis, the healthy state of the spacecraft and the lack of long-term impact on the flight plan have reinforced confidence in the mission's ability to adapt to issues while still meeting its science milestones.

As ESCAPADE continues its cruise phase, engineers will refine subsequent correction opportunities, monitor spacecraft health and update timing for the Earth flyby and Mars arrival to account for the latest navigation data. The twin orbiters' eventual measurements will tie directly into broader efforts to understand how the Sun shapes planetary atmospheres across the solar system, complementing results from past missions like MAVEN at Mars and providing a template for future multi-spacecraft heliophysics and planetary campaigns.

Related Links
ESCAPADE (Escape and Plasma Acceleration and Dynamics Explorers), NASA
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