Russian Mars Moon Probe Phobos-Grunt Crashed In Pacific Ocean
January 16, 2012
The Phobos-Grunt spacecraft, which was supposed to have traveled to Phobos, a moon of Mars, and back, crashed on Earth. The ambitious project crashed into the Pacific Ocean, on January 15th, between 4:59PM and 5:47PM. The exact time is still unclear, as the most advanced tracking equipment belongs to the US military, and is not available to astronomers.
The South Pacific isn’t a good place to crash, as it makes tracking objects hard since it’s basically large and empty. The probe broke up and only 441 lbs (200 kg) made it through the Earth’s atmosphere. The fragments are scattered over an area of thousands of square kilometers of ocean.
It could be the on-board computer that didn’t give the command correctly, which suggests a software error, or that the engine didn’t fire at all. Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, states that the entire project aimed too high and that it was improperly managed.
In 1996, another Russian mission to Mars also failed after its launch. While the Russian space agency hasn’t yet confirmed its next mission to Mars, Russian scientists are in discussion with the ESA and NASA in an effort to join the ExoMars Project, which hopes to send missions to the red planet in 2016 and 2018.
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