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MARSDAILY
ESA gives up bids to contact stranded Russian space probe
by Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Dec 2, 2011


The European Space Agency said it will no longer try to make contact with Russia's stranded Mars probe Phobos-Grunt if attempts made Friday fail.

"We have already told our colleagues at the (Russian) Lavochkin institute that if communication bids during the day and tonight fail we will stop," Interfax news agency quoted ESA's representative in Russia, Rene Pichel, as saying.

Pichel said ESA and the Russians had not had contacts with the probe for more than a week and the instruments and people working to establish contacts should therefore be used for other projects.

"They're mobilising resources that we could use for other projects," he said.

The European Space Agency's ground station in Perth, Australia had made contact with the probe on November 22, the first sign of life from Phobos-Grunt since it got stuck in Earth's orbit after launch on November 9.

The Perth tracking station had also managed to receive a second signal from the probe.

But ESA said last week further attempts had failed.

On November 24, Russia announced its scientists had for the first time made contact with 13.5-tonne Phobos-Grunt and a signal and some telemetry data had been received.

Phobos-Grunt is Russia's first interplanetary mission since 1996, when an attempt to send an instrument-laden 6.1-tonne probe to the Red Planet, Mars 96, ended with a failure just after launch.

The five-billion-ruble ($165-million) scout was designed to travel to the Martian moon of Phobos, scoop up soil and return the sample to Earth by 2014.

Related Links
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
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MARSDAILY
The Martian Chronicles Continues With Russian Bit Part
Moscow (Voice of Russia) Nov 28, 2011
While the future of Russia's Phobos-Grunt probe remains unclear, a team of experts from a space research institute in Moscow has arrived in the United States where NASA is about to launch its Curiosity rover to the Red Planet on what is seen as the 'most ambitious mission' ever sent to Mars. The rover, also known as the Mars Science Laboratory, will probe the Red Planet's secrets using a w ... read more


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