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Mars NASA Space United Kingdom

Lost Beagle2 Probe Found 'Intact' On Mars 130

New submitter Stolga sends this report from the BBC: The missing Mars robot Beagle2 has been found on the surface of the Red Planet, apparently intact. High-resolution images taken from orbit have identified its landing location, and it looks to be in one piece. The UK-led probe tried to make a soft touchdown on the dusty world on Christmas Day, 2003, using parachutes and airbags — but no radio contact was ever made with the probe. Many scientists assumed it had been destroyed in a high-velocity impact.

The new pictures, acquired by NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, give the lie to that notion, and hint at what really happened to the European mission. Beagle's design incorporated a series of deployable "petals," on which were mounted its solar panels. From the images, it seems that this system did not unfurl fully. "Without full deployment, there is no way we could have communicated with it as the radio frequency antenna was under the solar panels," explained Prof Mark Sims, Beagle's mission manager from Leicester University.
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Lost Beagle2 Probe Found 'Intact' On Mars

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  • by CajunArson ( 465943 ) on Friday January 16, 2015 @10:59AM (#48830187) Journal

    Dammit! First it's spy satellites watching my every movement on earth, and now you can't even have privacy ON MARS!

  • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Friday January 16, 2015 @11:04AM (#48830249) Journal
    Despite the fact that I know that the probe's namesake was the HMS Beagle, of Darwin fame, the news that a lost beagle has been found on mars still conjures up an enormously sad image of a small dog, curled up tightly; but still frozen solid, in the vast emptiness of the martian landscape.
    • At first glance, TFT suggests they found a veterinarian's anal thermometer in a most unlikely location.

    • True. But Scotty and that admiral will be happy to know where it rematerialised.
    • I was thinking maybe that they found it drinking cocktails in a bar on Titan. But your comment made me think of this South Park episode [nocookie.net]. Si.
    • by gmhowell ( 26755 )

      Laika had to go somewhere.

    • Colin Pillinger interview transcript (PDF) [bbc.co.uk]:

      We've had lots of cats that have wandered off and... but that was the thing about the name, everybody congratulated us on the name Beagle 2 as inspirational, until after it didn't call in and we had all manner of e-mails, texts, telephone calls, letters saying didn't you realise that Beagles are the worst dogs you could possibly have to let off the leash - they run off, they chase something, they don't come back when they're called, they only come home when they're hungry and they show no sign of remorse.

  • by us7892 ( 655683 ) on Friday January 16, 2015 @11:06AM (#48830289) Homepage
    "Without full deployment, there is no way we could have communicated with it as the radio frequency antenna was under the solar panels,"

    Perhaps the placement of the antenna was a design flaw? Placement of the antenna that did not depend on success of unfurling is a lesson learned.
    • by snookiex ( 1814614 ) on Friday January 16, 2015 @11:15AM (#48830391) Homepage

      So... blame it on the Martians for holding it wrong?

    • by khallow ( 566160 ) on Friday January 16, 2015 @11:23AM (#48830519)

      Perhaps the placement of the antenna was a design flaw? Placement of the antenna that did not depend on success of unfurling is a lesson learned.

      What will the point of that lesson be, if they don't build more space probes based on that design? And suppose they already knew ahead of time that this was a design flaw? Then the best you can say is that this accident confirmed that the design flaw was indeed a design flaw.

      My point behind this observation is that there is an even more important lesson present here which continues to be ignored. There are considerable economies of scale to making multiple copies of a probe design. And here is one of those economies, you can actually take a "lesson learned" and use it to improve future implementation of the space probe design.

      If they were to now reuse the Beagle 2 design, they would know to study and fix the solar cell unfurling mechanism in order to prevent a now proven failure mode. They would also know that the landing mechanisms mostly work (though they might have contributed in some way to the final failure mode).

      • If they were to now reuse the Beagle 2 design, they would know to study and fix the solar cell unfurling mechanism in order to prevent a now proven failure mode.

        To me that doesn't make any sense, since they have no idea why that design failed. They don't even know for sure it failed, perhaps the thing did hit way to hard on impact and these are the only pieces left that are together.

        Even if the craft was still whole and it was simply the petals failing to unfold, you don't know why - Dust? Cold? You'd hav

        • by khallow ( 566160 ) on Friday January 16, 2015 @11:55AM (#48830897)

          To me that doesn't make any sense, since they have no idea why that design failed. They don't even know for sure it failed, perhaps the thing did hit way to hard on impact and these are the only pieces left that are together.

          The article stated that they did have some idea why that design failed. They have images of the probe. In turn, this evidence indicates that the probe landed mostly intact with partial deployment of the solar panels.

          Even if the craft was still whole and it was simply the petals failing to unfold, you don't know why - Dust? Cold? You'd have to guess and put in a fix based on that guess, but you wouldn't be sure.

          Knowledge is imperfect. So what? There is more than enough here to repeatedly test landing and deployment. Even if the failure can't be exactly duplicated, they probably can figure out what systems were probably behind the failure.

          Way better as others are saying to switch to a design (nuclear battery) without something that failed in some unknown way existing at all.

          That introduces its own drawbacks and failure modes. And the reasons why they didn't choose that other system (such as not having access to plutonium 238) still apply.

          • From the article:

            The failure cause is pure speculation

            You said

            The article stated that they did have some idea why that design failed.

            What in the article supports your assertion? They gave a guess after they said it was only a guess. Saying they have "an idea" implies there is some proof to back up the "idea" which they do not have yet.

            There is more than enough here to repeatedly test landing and deployment.

            Are you saying they did not do that before the original launch? I'm pretty sure they had rigorous t

            • by khallow ( 566160 )

              What in the article supports your assertion? They gave a guess after they said it was only a guess. Saying they have "an idea" implies there is some proof to back up the "idea" which they do not have yet.

              I think what's annoying about your question is that I completely answered it in my previous reply. The evidence I mentioned is by definition empirical proof.

              And not all "pure" speculation is created equal. There is informed and uninformed speculation. Actual imagining of the crash site crosses that chasm.

              Are you saying they did not do that before the original launch? I'm pretty sure they had rigorous testing before, guessing at the failure mode and then doing testing to see if your new design works to prevent your guessed failure mode is simply foolhardy.

              Of course, they didn't test sufficiently! Else the accident wouldn't have happened in the first place!

              I see you're just not getting it. You can't perfectly test any engineered system. But you can test

            • by khallow ( 566160 )
              I also see you gloss over the fact that the ESA doesn't have reliable access to plutonium 238. This alone kills the case for using RTG technology since the alternatives to plutonium 238 (such as cobalt 60 or tritium) are much more massive per unit of power produced and thus, far less competitive with solar power.
          • They have images of the probe.

            Take a look at those images. They're trying to deduce a whole lot out of perhaps 10 pixels. If they has dropped a Vespa on the surface from 1 km up, it might look the same.

            • by khallow ( 566160 )
              It wouldn't. The images really are pretty detailed and more importantly, they have a model for why the images look the way they look.

              Look at the last 20 seconds of this video [telegraph.co.uk] which borrows from old simulations of the Beagle 2 probe deployment which folded out the solar panels in a particular order. The fold-out deployment shown in the video, if prematurely halted with two panels to go, exactly matches the image. I'd say that ten pixels are more than enough in this case. Plus, they've also imaged other p
          • That introduces its own drawbacks and failure modes. And the reasons why they didn't choose that other system (such as not having access to plutonium 238) still apply.

            the failure mode was the "E" in ESA. nukes in orbit are a non-starter in Europe. the people won't stand for it, and since they are paying for it, nukes are off the table for space probes. for ESA missions, that means solar or no mission.

            • by khallow ( 566160 )

              the failure mode was the "E" in ESA. nukes in orbit are a non-starter in Europe. the people won't stand for it, and since they are paying for it, nukes are off the table for space probes. for ESA missions, that means solar or no mission.

              And just as much resistance today as back when the Beagle 2 was being put together, right?

    • by gman003 ( 1693318 ) on Friday January 16, 2015 @11:25AM (#48830531)

      Why? Without solar panels, it would quickly run out of power, so you'd get barely anything done even if the antenna did deploy. Having the antenna underneath the panels probably helped protect it during atmospheric entry and landing as well.

      • "Solar panales did not unfold properly{#`%${%&`+'${`%&NO CARRIER")"

        would have been nice.

      • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

        It's a pretty clever design, in terms of being compact, if everything had clicked into place.

        It would have been the first direct life-detection experiment since the Viking probes of the 1970's.

        It's a bummer how they got all the way to 3rd base when things went kafooey.

    • by a_n_d_e_r_s ( 136412 ) on Friday January 16, 2015 @11:27AM (#48830559) Homepage Journal

      Not really. Without the solar panels it would have had no power. The solar panels are needed to have ongoing communication with it.

      Without power it's dead anyway.

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Perhaps the placement of the antenna was a design flaw? Placement of the antenna that did not depend on success of unfurling is a lesson learned.

      Well, since that's going to charge the batteries all you'd get is a "hey here I am oh wait why are my batteries draining gotta go kthxbye", a little easier to debug I guess but pretty much just as catastrophic.

    • Perhaps, or it could have been there for protection during the landing sequence.

      And its likely that without the solar panels extended, there wasn't going to be much use of having the antenna available due to a rapidly depleting power source.

    • "Perhaps the placement of the antenna was a design flaw?"

      It doesn't look like. The antenna needs energy to work and the energy comes from the solar panels. Given such a dependency it doesn't seem wrong to make the antenna serviceable dependendant on the solar panels being deployed -with the nice side effect that the panels will somehow protect the antenna at landing.

    • by Cramer ( 69040 )

      I was thinking the same thing, but if the panels don't deploy, it won't have enough power to talk for very long.

    • "The most annoying thing is that we don't have the sequence of events recorded through the radio beacon that we were intending to put on Beagle 2." @2:00m podcast [bbc.co.uk] Colin Pillinger [bbc.co.uk] Dec 27, 2011
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Congratulations on your near success.

    Seriously - you did a lot better than some other much better funded probes did.

  • by auric_dude ( 610172 ) on Friday January 16, 2015 @11:10AM (#48830321)
    Colin Pillinger dies after brain haemorrhage http://www.bbc.com/news/scienc... [bbc.com]
  • Quick someone send it the command to roll over!!
  • by Anonymous Coward

    This might be a good mission for the old wheeled vehicle with an arm. Go to this location, then attempt to unfurl the panels.

  • Designing the antenna to be "hidden" by the 5 "leaves" is absurd. This provides more evidence supporting ground-based probes shoud be using nuclear power sources. Spirit, Opportunity, Philae... when will we drop the nonsensical arguments about sending nuclear power sources to space?
    • Re:Design failure (Score:5, Interesting)

      by khallow ( 566160 ) on Friday January 16, 2015 @11:32AM (#48830601)

      This provides more evidence supporting ground-based probes shoud be using nuclear power sources.

      Nuclear power sources will need to be unfurled as well. They have to be some distance away from the more delicate electronics and sensors (especially anything trying to detect the sort of particles that the power source is generating!).

      Spirit, Opportunity, Philae... when will we drop the nonsensical arguments about sending nuclear power sources to space?

      How about the sensible arguments for not sending nuclear power sources? Like not having access to Plutonium 238? Solar power works as has been demonstrated multiple times on the surface of Mars with a fair number of successful projects.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Is P-238 really the *only* option? Are there any other possibilities? How about get some people brainstorming and testing some alternate options? With all the recent research into batteries it seems some other possibilities may be possible.

        Wow, poor Philae spent years traversing the solar system to do the impossible, only to go out in 90 minutes. And the Hugyns probe was similar. What a freaking waste of resources. Yes, something is better than nothing. But it is like loading up the car and traveling from F

        • by khallow ( 566160 )

          How about get some people brainstorming and testing some alternate options?

          Yes. I gather cobalt 60 would work over the lifespan of the probe and it's almost off the shelf. As I understand it, the problem is that you need about four times the mass of RTG using cobalt 60 than you do with plutonium 238, And that makes cobalt 60 rather uncompetitive with solar panels.

        • Gd148 is sexy as hell [nanomedicine.com], but isn't exactly available in the corner drugstore. I quote:

          A ~0.2 kg block of pure Gd148 (~1 inch^3) initially yields ~120 watts, sufficient in theory to meet the complete basal power needs of an entire human body for ~1 century...

          • It might yield a watt, but I would be astonished if you can convert more than 5% of that into electricity.

            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T... [wikipedia.org]

            Oh, here they say 5% - 8% efficiency ... but that is on larger scale than 1inch^3

            • 1 cu. in. should not be a problem for reasonable efficiency; there are good techniques for transferring heat to radiators, etc.
            • You assume RTG technology - I don't and I don't think the linked article does, either.

              They discuss Energy Organs [nanomedicine.com] here, stating that (emphasis mine):

              a sphere of Gd148 emitting ~100 watts with a 75-year half-life and measuring 3.41 cm in diameter with a 5-micron Pt shield glows at 1326 K (e-sub-r for Pt at 1326 K is 0.156; Gd melting point ~1585 K, Pt melting point ~2042 K); this is approximately the decomposition temperature of diamond (into graphite) and well above the combustion point for diamond in air (Section 6.5.3), so Pt-coated sapphire (sapphire melting point ~2310 K) may provide a more stable first wall for the radionuclide energy organ. Carnot thermal efficiency for a heat engine using this source could reach, at most, ~76%.

              I'd say that's pretty good efficiency, and given the power levels and temperatures, I think non-RTG technologies should be used. If the system never drops below 0C, why not use a more conventional system?

              Plus, you could just use the Gd148 to keep the craft warm and use other means to generate electrical power.

              • The Carnot efficiency is only helpful if you actually have a device able to harvest that energy.
                Otherwise it is just a meaningless number.

                Carnots laws simply say the efficiency in an 'heat engine' depends on the temperature difference between the max and the min temperature.

                So if you had a turbine made from material that can sustain the max temperatures you mention and is operating in an environment that has the low/min temperatures we see, then the maximum possible efficiency is the number you have.

                As we d

                • Why you link an article about hypothetical nano technology is bejond me :)

                  Because it's fascinating, and it mentions the extreme energy density of other 'safe' radionuclides besides Plutonium 238. That was the question that was asked in the parent post, after all. :-)

                  As for efficiency, I bet a closed-cycle Stirling Engine system [wikipedia.org] could work on Mars with Gd148 as the heat source and a radiative heat sink to space or the (almost non-existent) Mars atmosphere as the sink. Naturally you could parallel the Gd148

                  • The stirling engine needs to survive that temperature (the one of the heat source). That is the main problem.
                    In respect to a stirling engine, and the needed wattage we talk about two things: the engine and the generator. (After all the engine has to move the generator to produce the electric power).
                    Then we have to check how much heat we can radiate.
                    Because the temperature of the radiator will be the 'low temperature' of the Carnot efficiency calculation.

                    I mean: generating electric power and designing a syst

    • Said probes are somewhat delicate and require various forms of when falling from a height of 401 million km, especially the final *heat shielding* for the height of 11km for it's fall through the Martian Atmosphere and heating to a temperature of 2,100 degrees C.

      Also, as 2,100 degrees C is considerably higher than the melting point of 1,410 degrees C of the silicon antenna used to communicate from Mars back to Earth, it is understandable why said antenna would need to be *inside* the heat shield rather
    • Designing the antenna to be "hidden" by the 5 "leaves" is absurd.

      No, it is not. Expecting an antenna to be useful without power is absurd

      This provides more evidence supporting ground-based probes shoud be using nuclear power sources. Spirit, Opportunity, Philae... when will we drop the nonsensical arguments about sending nuclear power sources to space?

      No, it does not. Solar is proven technology. And when a rocket fails to make it to space and explodes, it doesn't spread Plutonium all over Florida.

      When will the nuke-nutters stop trying to bankrupt economies with nonsensical dreams of nuclear power being a panacea, when it is the most expensive power source that humans have ever conceived and accordingly has never been even remotely economically viable?

  • There's a white dot directly above the Beagle, I wonder if that's a snapped-off solar panel petal.

    • No, it is K'Breel holding the Staff of Power that he won by stabbing the Evil Earthling Intruder before it could attack the hive.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Perhaps it did hit the ground fairly hard, which caused it to unravel in a way that somewhat resembles the intended landing configuration.

  • Now that we know where it is, and a rough idea on what's wrong, I wonder if we can send something down to get Beagle operational. I know it would most likely be more efficient to send out a new probe witht he same abilities (like we have), but I like the idea of fixing something on Mars.
    • Fixed? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by fltsimbuff ( 606866 ) *

      I would guess that the solar panels are supposed to charge the batteries. Batteries can fail pretty easily at very low temperatures, and a lot of spacecraft need energy to keep warm in addition to running the electronics. In all likelihood it has been without sufficient power long enough for the onboard "perishables" like batteries to be useless.

    • Two of the solar panels did unfurl and theoretically are producing power. Perhaps not enough to run all the instruments, but it's something and it's possible could be keeping the batteries charged.

      Most of these probes, sensing loss of communication or other problem, go into a 'fault mode' where the bare minimum is kept going until instructions are received. The probe itself might be functional and alive, just with low power and unable to communicate with it's primary array.

      I wonder if there is another way

  • by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Friday January 16, 2015 @11:25AM (#48830529)

    Little probe, lonely on mars, seeks companionship
    Or maybe just someone to listen
    Please respond
    Maibox empty for 11 years now
    Have you forgotten me?

  • So given that we know where to find it and could use the orbiter to send a strong, tightly-confined signal that its (poorly placed, apparently) antenna might have some small chance of detecting - Any possibility that we could revive it at this point, send it some sort of "reboot and try again" signal?
    • by jandrese ( 485 )
      The batteries on the probe are almost certainly frozen and useless by now. Plus, the mission control for that project packed up their equipment and moved on years ago.
    • As Coroner I must aver,
      I thoroughly examined her.
      And she's not only merely dead,
      she's really most sincerely dead.

  • Maybe NASA can go bump it with a rover a couple of times......you never know....always works on my B&W TV!

  • Knowing what failed is valuable. Now instead of engineers looking at rockets and/or parachutes, they can concentrate on the panel deployment system. Maybe they overlooked something and it was more easily fouled by dust than they thought.

  • This is related to space, so I'm posting it: You can see a video of the crash of the Faclon here [slate.com]. Plus a couple of funny tweets by Elon Musk, such as when he calls the crash a "RUD (rapid unscheduled disassembly)" - heh.

  • What is the chance of a future mission giving it a little nudge and salvaging the probe?

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