MAY 16, 2024
RELEASE 24-070
NASAâs Associate Administrator for the Science Mission Directorate Nicky Fox and ESAâs Director of Human and Robotic Exploration Daniel
Neuenschwander sign an agreement on the Rosalind Franklin mission at ESAâs headquarters in Paris, France on May 16, 2024.
Credits: ESA/Damien Dos Santos
NASA and ESA (European Space Agency) announced Thursday they signed an agreement to expand NASAâs work on the ExoMars Rosalind Franklin rover, an ESA-led mission launching in 2028 that
will search for signs of ancient life on the Red Planet.
With this memorandum of understanding, the NASA Launch Services Program will procure a U.S. commercial launch provider for the Rosalind Franklin rover. The agency will also provide
heater units and elements of the propulsion system needed to land on Mars. A new instrument on the rover will be the first drill to a depth of up to 6.5 feet (2 meters) deep below the surface to collect ice samples that have been protected from surface radiation
and extreme temperatures.
âThe Rosalind Franklin roverâs unique drilling capabilities and onboard samples laboratory have outstanding scientific value for humanityâs search for evidence of past life on Mars,â
said Nicola Fox, associate administrator, Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. âNASA supports the Rosalind Franklin mission to continue the strong partnership between the United States and Europe to explore the unknown in our solar
system and beyond.â
Through an existing, separate partnership with the German Aerospace Center (DLR) and the French space agency CNES (Centre National dâEtudes Spatiales), NASA is contributing key components
to the Rosalind Franklin roverâs primary science instrument, the Mars Organic Molecule Analyzer, that will search for the building blocks of life in the soil samples.
NASA has a longstanding partnership with the Department of Energy to use radioisotope power sources on the agencyâs space missions and will be partnering again with the Energy Department
for the use of lightweight radioisotope heater units for the rover.
The Rosalind Franklin rover mission complements the Mars Sample Return multi-mission
campaign led by both agencies.
For more information on NASAâs research on Mars, visit:
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