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This site approaches (generically) the future – hopefully not too far - robotic flight over Mars.
http://www.robotbooks.com/Mars-plane.htm This site explores some general concepts http://quest.nasa.gov/aero/planetary/images.html and this establishes some especifications (not sure if they´re designed for professional science) http://quest.nasa.gov/aero/planetary/marsplane.html However, I can´t find hard info. Is there any actual project being developed? Any serious schedule for such a mission? Isn’t it worth a discussion? ![]()
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Try this article. The Mars plane notion is definitely serious - one was under consideration for funding as a 2007 mission, though the Phoenix lander got the nod. (Phoenix had an advantage because they already had most of the equipment built and ready to go.)
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Wow, all that way for 1 hr of exploration (flight time). What kind of camera and image resolution could be achieved vs. orbiters, and how could that improvement be used to best advantage for a ~300 mile flight path?
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Of course, there may be other approaches, for example using a rover as a refueling point, perhaps one could even use a motor system the rover could make fuel for on mars, like the entomopter suggested at the Entomopter Project.
Balloon based probes could also be a possibility, either by using pressurized gas tanks or just heated gas from the atmosphere. Perhaps oan could even use a solar balloon...
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Needless to say, flying any sort of an aircraft on Mars would be a challenge, as Austin explains here. ![]() |
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Still, NASA is considering plans to use a blimp to explore Titan as a follow-on to the Huygens probe, as mentioned in this NASA/JPL press release. The technology could also be adapted for use on Mars. |