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Russian sanctions mean ESA's Mars rover is unlikely to launch in 2022

Russian sanctions mean ESA's Mars rover is unlikely to launch in 2022

By James maryPublished 2 years ago 3 min read
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Russian sanctions mean ESA's Mars rover is unlikely to launch in 2022
Photo by Nicolas Lobos on Unsplash

The European Space Agency (ESA) has said the European-Russian joint deployment to Mars this year is "extremely unlikely" due to sanctions imposed following Russia's invasion of Ukraine. On Monday, the European Space Agency said the launch in 2022 was now "absolutely impossible" after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. After Moscow shocked the world last week with a Moscow attack on Ukraine and the EU responded with severe economic sanctions, ESA said "sanctions and the general situation make the 2022 launch less likely." The European Space Agency has said a joint European-Russian Mars campaign planned for this year could be delayed, citing sanctions linked to Russia's invasion of Ukraine and ESA member states.

It is unlikely that the ExoMars investigation will begin in 2022, given Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the outcome of the country's sanctions, ESA said on Monday. The ExoMars rover was supposed to go to Mars in September, but ESA said the "broader context" made that impossible. Until last week, the ESA planned to send a team of ESA supporters to the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan to begin assembling the Rosalind Franklin rover with the entire spacecraft and the Russian Soyuz rocket, Prepare for launch. ExoMars equipment, which includes the Trace Gas Orbiter (in Mars orbit since 2016) and the upcoming British Rosalind Franklin rover, Trace Gas Orbiter (in Mars orbit since 2016), was launched in 2016 by the European Space Agency (ESA). The most important cooperation with Russia outside the ISS.

ESA already has two spacecraft orbiting Mars, including the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter launched by the Russian rocket in 2016. The main ESA-Russia program so far is ExoMars 2022, scheduled to launch on Mars in September. USSR and Russia's attempts to send a spacecraft to Mars have been a problem since the 1960s, and ESA's first attempt to retire to Mars has failed, so both sides are looking forward to ExoMars 2022 being a chance to restart. Mars of them. experimental efforts.

The ExoMars program wanted to install a rover on Red Planet, as well as a NASA rover and a Chinese rover. The goal is to send the first European rover to Mars to find out if there ever was life on Mars. The first flight of the Russian series Rosalind Franklin, part of the ExoMars program and is expected to be launched in September in search of life on Red Planet.

A planned European voyage to Mars was scheduled to begin in September, and the ExoMars Rosalind Franklin rover would arrive on Mars eight months later with the help of Russian missiles and, in particular, a Russian stoppage system. A planned European expedition to Mars was made possible by Russia's important role, but now it seems to be failing. Experts say it is unclear whether the work will continue because September and October were supposed to have a ten-day window during which the planets had to move smoothly.

The European ExoMars rover, built to monitor the signs of health on the Red Planet, is unlikely to launch a Russian rocket in September as planned after European countries imposed sanctions on Russia's violence in Ukraine. The European ExoMars rover, scheduled to launch a Russian rocket in September, will almost certainly be delayed by Russian sanctions before it invades Ukraine. Russia's invasion of Ukraine could harm space operations, with much uncertainty about the launch of the satellite Rosalind Franklin rover and OneWeb, a British company that is part of the United Kingdom and the British government.

Russia's previous attacks on Crimea in 2014 and Georgia in 2008 did not change the operation of the ISS, although Dmitry Rogozin, head of the Russian center Rosocosmos, wrote on Twitter on February 24 that US sanctions against Russia could "destroy". interaction in the ISS. So far, NASA has stated that the ISS will not be affected, despite severe sanctions imposed on Russia by countries around the world. ESA said ESA was working with NASA to understand how sanctions against Russia would affect the International Space Station.

On Monday, NASA said there was no evidence that Russia would end its support for the International Space Station following US sanctions, despite Rososcosmos official Dmitry Rogozin saying it could happen last year. On Saturday, Russia announced that, in response to European sanctions, Russia would suspend the launch of the Soyuz-ST spacecraft at the launch of ESA Kourou and withdraw its support team. ESA revealed today that because of what has already been announced, ESA is looking at alternatives.

The ESA statement came after Russia announced over the weekend that it would stop launching its Soyuz rockets at a European airport in French Guiana in response to European sanctions against Russia. The ESA announcement came after Rososcosmos announced on February 26 that it would withdraw its employees from Kourou airport in French Guiana, the largest rocket company in the European Union. The Russian contribution includes the Kazachok rover depot, a few scientific instruments, and the launch of the Russian rocket.

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