homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Russians declare Phobos-Grunt probe failed

The probe, which had the purpose of reaching one of the two Martian moons, was declared dead, and it will probably crash on Earth in January, without presenting any kind of risk to populated areas.   The Phobos-Grunt probe was supposed to reach Mars, orbit it a few months, deploy a Chinese satellite, then land […]

Mihai Andrei
November 14, 2011 @ 9:31 am

share Share

The probe, which had the purpose of reaching one of the two Martian moons, was declared dead, and it will probably crash on Earth in January, without presenting any kind of risk to populated areas.

Phobos Grunt

An artist's depiction of the Phobos-Grunt probe on orbit

 

The Phobos-Grunt probe was supposed to reach Mars, orbit it a few months, deploy a Chinese satellite, then land on Phobos, take samples of rocks and dust and then return to Earth – ambitious plans. But everything took a turn for the worse, when the computer onboard the craft failed to fire two engine burns to send it on its trajectory. Russian scientists and engineers had three days to fix this issue before the batteries wouldn’t have enough power to restart the engines.

However, the task proved to be too big, and the probe was declared dead, in a major blow for the Russian space program morale. After the US has retired all its space orbiters, this is another major setback for space exploration worldwide; hopefully, the Russians will be able to cope with this problem and not give up on further such initiatives, but rather, focus and progress even more. The entire space program needs to stay focused, and it requires as much support as it can get.

share Share

China's Tiangong space station has some bacteria that are unknown to science

These aren't the first bacteria to be discovered in space but they are particularly well-adapted for space station life.

A Soviet shuttle from the Space Race is about to fall uncontrollably from the sky

A ghost from time past is about to return to Earth. But it won't be smooth.

Astronauts May Soon Eat Fresh Fish Farmed on the Moon

Scientists hope Lunar Hatch will make fresh fish part of space missions' menus.

Yeast in Space? Scientists Just Launched a Tiny Lab to See If We Can Create Food in Orbit

Microbes can brew food in space — a game-changer for astronauts.

Astronauts made miso in space and it's a bit different than the one from Earth

Are we starting to have a “space terroir” for foods?

John McFall Becomes the World’s First Disabled Astronaut in Historic ESA Decision

McFall had to demonstrate that he could perform all the tasks needed for a long-duration mission — which he did with flying colors.

Happy Cosmic Valentine's Day! Here's a Stellar Bouquet For You

Have some beautiful images from space if flowers aren't quite your thing.

The World’s First Moon Data Center Is Launching — Here’s What It Means

There's no shortage of data centers being built on Earth, but this one's a little different.

China plans to put a flag on the moon in 2026 — one that flutters using electromagnetic forces

Beyond this symbolic achievement, the mission aims to explore the Moon’s south pole, searching for water ice and resources essential for future human exploration.

Chilling and Uneasy: The Untethered Spacewalk That Redefined Exploration

In 1984, astronaut Bruce McCandless II made history—and defied human instinct—by stepping into the vast void of space untethered.