Europe successfully met its planned Christmas rendezvous with the planet Mars
Published:
26 December 2003 y., Friday
Europe successfully met its planned Christmas rendezvous with the planet Mars today but an ominous silence from the planetary lander the Beagle 2 had scientists worried.
Beagle 2 failed to make contact with a British radio telescope in its second chance to call home since its scheduled landing.
Scientists were hoping that the giant Lovell telescope at Jodrell Bank in west England would pick up a signal between 2200 GMT yesterday and 0030 GMT today (0900 to 1130 today AEDT) to tell them the missing British-built spacecraft had arrived safely on Mars.
"Jodrell Bank listened out for Beagle 2 tonight, but did not detect a transmission," said a statement from project spokesman Peter Barratt.
The US space agency NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter flew over Beagle 2's landing site earlier yesterday but failed to detect the expected message - a nine-note tune composed by the British pop group Blur.
"The next opportunity will be via Mars Odyssey at 1815 GMT on Friday (0515 Saturday AEDT)", Barratt said.
Beagle 2's mothership, the European Space Agency's orbiter Mars Express, was placed in orbit around Mars at around the same time as the lander was to have touched down at 0254 GMT yesterday (1354 AEDT).
But Mars Express will need until January 4, after completing a series of final orbital manoeuvres, before it can be in position to receive any signal from Beagle 2, if the probe is in fact alive and well.
Šaltinis:
theage.com.au
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
A global treaty aimed at dissuading children from smoking and helping adults kick the habit came into force on Sunday with the United Nations saying it could save millions of lives
more »
The Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs has granted 500,000 Estonian Kroons (appr. 32,000 euros) to the International Federation of Red Cross (IFRC) as a response to their appeal and for the activities to help the victims of the Asian earthquake
more »
Saudi doctors managed to separate Monday the lower organs of two infant Polish girls who were born joined at the spine and intestines, a member of the medical team said
more »
A study shows radioactive fallout from the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident in Ukraine led to an increase in cancer cases in northern Sweden
more »
Kazakhstan is moving radioactive waste from the Baykonur space centre to a former nuclear testing ground in the northern Kazakh city of Semipalatinsk
more »
Seven EU states have agreed to share research and work together in a bid to find a vaccine for the AIDS virus
more »
More than a million people have signed a petition calling for a referendum to abolish a new Italian law on assisted reproduction
more »
Virtually the entire risk of heart attack can be predicted
more »
Ukraine will continue building a canal in the Danube River delta, a senior Foreign Ministry official said on Monday, despite a European Union call to halt work amid fears the waterway could harm the environment
more »
Eighteen years after Chernobyl, Finns should still be wary of mushrooms
more »