The Day in Photos – October 21, 2016

An illustration released by the European Space Agency (ESA) shows the Schiaparelli EDM lander. Europe’s second attempt to reach the surface of Mars appeared in peril Thursday as initial analysis suggested the latest lander may have plummeted to its demise. While holding out faint hope, ground controllers said it seemed the paddling pool-sized lander’s parachute may have been discarded too early, and its fall-breaking thrusters switched off too soon. The lander, dubbed Schiaparelli, was on a test-run for a future rover that will seek out evidence of life, past or present, on the Red Planet. But it fell silent seconds before its scheduled touchdown, while its mothership Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) entered Mars’ orbit as planned – part of a joint European-Russian project. “We are not in a position yet to determine the dynamic condition at which the lander touched the ground”, European Space Agency (ESA) head of solar and planetary missions Andrea Accomazzo told a webcast news briefing at mission control in Darmstadt, Germany. Further analysis must be done of some 600 megabytes of data the €230 million ($251 million) craft sent home before its signal died, to “know whether it survived structurally or not”. This could take “some time”, Accomazzo added. ESA and NASA Mars orbiters, meanwhile, were keeping their eyes and ears open for any signal from the lander. If not, this would be Europe’s second failed Mars landing in a row, joining a string of unsuccessful attempts by global powers to explore our planetary neighbor’s hostile surface. (Photo by Reuters/ESA/ATG Medialab)
The Day in Photos – October 21, 2016
   
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