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List of missions to Mars

Launches to Mars
Decade
1960s
12
1970s
11
1980s
2
1990s
6
2000s
8
2010s
6
2020s
4

This is a list of the 50 spacecraft missions (including unsuccessful ones) relating to the planet Mars, such as orbiters and rovers.

Missions Edit

Mission Type Legend
  Mission to Mars
  Gravity assist, destination elsewhere
Mission Spacecraft Launch Date Operator Mission Type[1] Outcome[2] Remarks Carrier rocket[3]
1M No.1 1M No.1 10 October 1960 OKB-1
  Soviet Union
Flyby Launch failure Failed to achieve Earth orbit Molniya
1M No.2 1M No.2 14 October 1960 OKB-1
  Soviet Union
Flyby Launch failure Failed to achieve Earth orbit Molniya
2MV-4 No.1 2MV-4 No.1 24 October 1962   Soviet Union Flyby Launch failure Booster stage ("Block L") disintegrated in LEO Molniya
Mars 1 Mars 1
(2MV-4 No.2)
1 November 1962   Soviet Union Flyby Spacecraft failure Communications lost before first flyby Molniya
2MV-3 No.1 2MV-3 No.1 4 November 1962   Soviet Union Lander Launch failure Never left LEO Molniya
Mariner 3 Mariner 3 5 November 1964 NASA
  United States
Flyby Launch failure Payload fairing failed to separate Atlas LV-3 Agena-D
Mariner 4 Mariner 4 28 November 1964 NASA
  United States
Flyby Successful First successful flyby of Mars on 15 July 1965 Atlas LV-3 Agena-D
Zond 2 Zond 2
(3MV-4A No.2)
30 November 1964   Soviet Union Flyby Spacecraft failure Communications lost before flyby Molniya
Mariner 6 Mariner 6 25 February 1969 NASA
  United States
Flyby Successful Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D
2M No.521 2M No.521

(1969A)[4]

27 March 1969   Soviet Union Orbiter Launch failure Failed to achieve Earth orbit Proton-K/D
Mariner 7 Mariner 7 27 March 1969 NASA
  United States
Flyby Successful Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D
2M No.522 2M No.522

(1969B)[4]

2 April 1969   Soviet Union Orbiter Launch failure Failed to achieve Earth orbit Proton-K/D
Mariner 8 Mariner 8 9 May 1971 NASA
  United States
Orbiter Launch failure Failed to achieve Earth orbit Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D
Kosmos 419 Kosmos 419
(3MS No.170)
10 May 1971   Soviet Union Orbiter Launch failure Never left LEO; booster stage burn timer set incorrectly Proton-K/D
Mars 2 Mars 2
(4M No.171)
19 May 1971   Soviet Union Orbiter Successful On November 27 it became in short sequence the second spacecraft to orbit another planet.[5] Operated for 362 orbits[6] Proton-K/D
Mars 2 lander
(SA 4M No.171)
Lander Spacecraft failure First lander to impact Mars. Deployed from Mars 2, failed to land during attempt on 27 November 1971.[7]
Prop-M Rover Failure
Lost with Mars 2
First rover to impact Mars. Lost when the Mars 2 lander crashed into the surface of Mars.
Mars 3 Mars 3
(4M No.172)
28 May 1971   Soviet Union Orbiter Successful On December 2 it became in short sequence the third spacecraft to orbit another planet.[5] Operated for 20 orbits[8][9] Proton-K/D
Mars 3 lander
(SA 4M No.172)
Lander Partial success[10][11] First lander to make a soft landing on Mars. Landed on 2 December 1971. First partial image (70 lines) transmitted showing "gray background with no details".[8] Contact lost 20 seconds after transmission started, 110 seconds after landing.[12][13]
Prop-M Rover Carrier vehicle failed before rover was deployed First rover to make a soft landing on another planet. 4.5 kg (9.9 lb) rover connected to the Mars 3 lander by a tether. Deployment status unknown due to loss of communications with the Mars 3 lander.[12]
Mariner 9 Mariner 9 30 May 1971 NASA
  United States
Orbiter Successful[14] First spacecraft to orbit another planet, two weeks ahead of Mars 2 on November 14.[5] Deactivated 516 days after entering orbit. Atlas SLV-3C Centaur-D
Mars 4 Mars 4
(3MS No.52S)
21 July 1973   Soviet Union Orbiter Partial success[15] Failed to perform orbital insertion burn. Returned photographs of Mars during flyby. Proton-K/D
Mars 5 Mars 5
(3MS No.53S)
25 July 1973   Soviet Union Orbiter Successful Contact lost after 9 days in Mars orbit. Returned 180 frames Proton-K/D
Mars 6 Mars 6
(3MP No.50P)
5 August 1973   Soviet Union Flyby Successful Flyby bus collected data.[16] Proton-K/D
Mars 6 lander Lander Spacecraft failure Contact lost upon landing, atmospheric data mostly unusable.
Mars 7 Mars 7
(3MP No.51P)
9 August 1973   Soviet Union Flyby Successful Flyby bus collected data. Proton-K/D
Mars 7 lander Lander Spacecraft failure Separated from coast stage prematurely, failed to enter Martian atmosphere.
Viking 1 Viking 1 orbiter 20 August 1975 NASA
  United States
Orbiter Successful Operated for 1385 orbits. Entered Mars orbit on 19 June 1976. Titan IIIE Centaur-D1T
Viking 1 lander Lander Successful First successful Mars lander. Deployed from Viking 1 orbiter. Landed on Mars on 20 July 1976. Operated for 2245 sols.
Viking 2 Viking 2 orbiter 9 September 1975 NASA
  United States
Orbiter Successful Operated for 700 orbits. Entered Mars orbit on 7 August 1976. Titan IIIE Centaur-D1T
Viking 2 lander Lander Successful Deployed from Viking 2 orbiter. Landed on Mars on September 1976. Operated for 1281 sols (11 April 1980).
Phobos 1 Phobos 1
(1F No.101)
7 July 1988   Soviet Union Orbiter Spacecraft failure Communications lost before reaching Mars; failed to enter orbit Proton-K/D-2
DAS Phobos lander Failure
Lost with Phobos 1
To have been deployed by Phobos 1
Phobos 2 Phobos 2
(1F No.102)
12 July 1988   Soviet Union Orbiter Mostly successful Orbital observations successful, communications lost before lander deployment. Proton-K/D-2
Prop-F Phobos rover Failure
Lost with Phobos 2
To have been deployed by Phobos 2
DAS Phobos lander Failure
Lost with Phobos 2
To have been deployed by Phobos 2
Mars Observer Mars Observer 25 September 1992 NASA
  United States
Orbiter Spacecraft failure Lost communications before orbital insertion Commercial Titan III
Mars Global Surveyor Mars Global Surveyor 7 November 1996 NASA
  United States
Orbiter Successful Operated for ten years Delta II 7925
Mars 96 Mars 96
(M1 No.520) (Mars-8)[4]
16 November 1996 Rosaviakosmos
  Russia
Orbiter
Penetrators
Spacecraft failure Never left LEO Proton-K/D-2
Mars 96 lander Lander Failure
Lost with Mars 96
Two Mars landers to have been deployed by Mars 96.
Mars 96 lander Lander Failure
Lost with Mars 96
Mars 96 penetrator Penetrator Failure
Lost with Mars 96
Two Mars Penetrators to have been deployed by Mars 96.
Mars 96 penetrator Penetrator Failure
Lost with Mars 96
Mars Pathfinder Mars Pathfinder 4 December 1996 NASA
  United States
Lander Successful Landed at 19.13°N 33.22°W on 4 July 1997,[17] Last contact on 27 September 1997 Delta II 7925
Sojourner Rover Successful First rover to operate on another planet. Operated for 84 days[18]
Nozomi Nozomi
(PLANET-B)
3 July 1998 ISAS
  Japan
Orbiter Spacecraft failure Performed a Mars flyby. Later contact lost due to loss of fuel. M-V
Mars Climate Orbiter Mars Climate Orbiter 11 December 1998 NASA
  United States
Orbiter Spacecraft failure Approached Mars too closely during orbit insertion attempt due to a software interface bug involving different units for impulse and either burned up in the atmosphere or entered solar orbit Delta II 7425
Mars Polar Lander / Deep Space 2 Mars Polar Lander 3 January 1999 NASA
  United States
Lander Spacecraft failure Failed to function after landing Delta II 7425
Deep Space 2 Penetrator Spacecraft failure No data transmitted after deployment from MPL.
Deep Space 2 Penetrator Spacecraft failure
Mars Odyssey Mars Odyssey 7 April 2001 NASA
  United States
Orbiter Operational Expected to remain operational until 2025. Delta II 7925
Mars Express Mars Express 2 June 2003 ESA
Orbiter Operational Enough fuel to remain operational until 2035 Soyuz-FG / Fregat
Beagle 2 ESA

  United Kingdom

Lander Lander failure No communications received after release from Mars Express. Orbital images of landing site suggest a successful landing, but two solar panels failed to deploy, obstructing its communications.
Spirit Spirit
(MER-A)
10 June 2003 NASA
  United States
Rover Successful Landed on 4 January 2004.
Operated for 2208 sols
Delta II 7925
Opportunity Opportunity
(MER-B)
8 July 2003 NASA
  United States
Rover Successful Landed on 25 January 2004.
Operated for 5351 sols
Delta II 7925H
Rosetta Rosetta 2 March 2004 ESA
Flyby

(Gravity assist)

Successful Flyby in February 2007 en route to 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko[19] Ariane 5G+
Philae Flyby

(Gravity assist)

Successful
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter 12 August 2005 NASA
  United States
Orbiter Operational Entered orbit on 10 March 2006 Atlas V 401
Phoenix Phoenix 4 August 2007 NASA
  United States
Lander Successful Landed on 25 May 2008.
End of mission 2 November 2008
Delta II 7925
Dawn Dawn 27 September 2007 NASA
  United States
Flyby

(Gravity assist)

Successful Flyby in February 2009 en route to 4 Vesta and Ceres Delta II 7925H
Fobos-Grunt / Yinghuo-1 Fobos-Grunt 8 November 2011 Roskosmos
  Russia
Orbiter
Phobos sample return
Spacecraft failure Never left LEO (intended to depart under own power) Zenit-2M
Yinghuo-1 CNSA
  China
Orbiter Failure
Lost with Fobos-Grunt
To have been deployed by Fobos-Grunt
Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity
(Mars Science Laboratory)
26 November 2011 NASA
  United States
Rover Operational Landed on 6 August 2012 Atlas V 541
Mars Orbiter Mission Mars Orbiter Mission 5 November 2013 ISRO
  India
Orbiter Successful Entered orbit on 24 September 2014. Mission extended to 2022, where the mission concluded on September 27, 2022 after contact was lost.[20] PSLV-XL
MAVEN MAVEN 18 November 2013 NASA
  United States
Orbiter Operational Orbit insertion on 22 September 2014[21] Atlas V 401
ExoMars 2016 ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter 14 March 2016 ESA/Roscosmos
ESA/  Russia
Orbiter Operational Entered orbit on 19 October 2016 Proton-M / Briz-M
Schiaparelli EDM lander ESA
Lander Spacecraft failure Carried by the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter. Although the lander crashed,[22][23] engineering data on the first five minutes of entry was successfully retrieved.[24][25]
InSight InSight 5 May 2018[26][27] NASA
  United States
Lander Successful Landed on 26 November 2018. Last contact 15 December 2022.[28] Atlas V 401
MarCO A Flyby Successful Flyby 26 November 2018. Last contact 29 December 2018.
MarCO B Flyby Successful Flyby 26 November 2018. Last contact 4 January 2019.
Emirates Mars Mission Hope 19 July 2020[29] MBRSC
  United Arab Emirates
Orbiter Operational Entered orbit on 9 February 2021.[30][31][32] H-IIA
Tianwen-1 Tianwen-1 orbiter 23 July 2020[33][34] CNSA
  China
Orbiter Operational Entered orbit on 10 February 2021 Long March 5
Tianwen-1 lander Lander Successful Landed on 14 May 2021
Zhurong rover Rover Operational Landed on 14 May 2021[35] Deployed by the Tianwen-1 lander on 22 May 2021.
Tianwen-1 Remote Camera Lander Successful Landed on 14 May 2021 Deployed by the Zhurong rover on 1 June 2021.[36]
Tianwen-1 Deployable Camera 2[37] Orbiter Successful Entered orbit on 10 February 2021, deployed 31 December 2021
Mars 2020 Perseverance 30 July 2020[38] NASA
  United States
Rover Operational Landed on 18 February 2021[39] Atlas V 541
Ingenuity Helicopter Operational First aerodynamic flight on another planet. Landed with Perseverance rover on 18 February 2021.[40] Deployed from rover on 3 April 2021. First flight achieved on April 19, 2021.[41]
Psyche Psyche 13 October 2023 NASA
  United States
Flyby
(Gravity assist)
Enroute Gravity assist en route to 16 Psyche in May 2026[42] Falcon Heavy

Landing locations Edit

 
Interactive image map of the global topography of Mars, overlaid with the position of Martian rovers and landers. Coloring of the base map indicates relative elevations of Martian surface.
  Clickable image: Clicking on the labels will open a new article.
Legend:   Active (white lined, ※)  Inactive  Planned (dash lined, ⁂)
 
Mars landing sites (16 December 2020)

In 1999, Mars Climate Orbiter accidentally entered Mars' atmosphere and either burnt up or left Mars' orbit on an unknown trajectory.[citation needed]

There are a number of derelict spacecraft orbiting Mars whose location is not known precisely. There is a proposal to use the Optical Navigation Camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter to search for small moons, dust rings and old orbiters.[43] As of 2016, there were believed to be eight derelict spacecraft in orbit around Mars (barring unforeseen event).[44] The Viking 1 orbiter was not expected to decay until at least 2019.[45] Mariner 9, which entered Mars orbit in 1971, was expected to remain in orbit until approximately 2022, when it was projected to enter the Martian atmosphere and either burn up, or crash into the planet's surface.[46]

Timeline Edit

Zhurong (rover)Tianwen-1Ingenuity (helicopter)Perseverance (rover)InSightCuriosity (rover)Phoenix (spacecraft)Opportunity (rover)Spirit (rover)Sojourner (rover)Mars PathfinderViking 2Viking 1Mars 3


Missions to the moons of Mars Edit

 
Phobos' Stickney Crater
 
Deimos (lower left) and Phobos (lower right) compared with the asteroid 951 Gaspra
 
Phobos by Mars Global Surveyor in 1998[47]

There have also have been proposed missions dedicated to explore the two moons of Mars, Phobos and Deimos. Many missions to Mars have also included dedicated observations of the moons, while this section is about missions focused solely on them. There have been three unsuccessful dedicated missions and many proposals. Because of the proximity of the Mars moons to Mars, any mission to them may also be considered a mission to Mars from some perspectives.

There have been at least three proposals in the United States Discovery Program, including PADME, PANDORA, and MERLIN.[48] The ESA has also considered a sample return mission, one of the latest known as Martian Moon Sample Return or MMSR, and it may use heritage from an asteroid sample return mission.[49]

Proposal Target Reference
Aladdin Phobos and Deimos [50]
DePhine Phobos and Deimos [51]
DSR Deimos [52]
Gulliver Deimos [53]
Hall Phobos and Deimos [54]
M-PADS Phobos and Deimos [55]
Merlin Phobos and Deimos [56]
MMSR (2011 ver.) Phobos or Deimos [49]
OSRIS-REx 2 Phobos or Deimos [57]
Pandora Phobos and Deimos [48]
PCROSS Phobos [58]
Phobos Surveyor Phobos [59]
PRIME Phobos [60]
Fobos-Grunt 2 Phobos [61]
Phootprint Phobos [62][63]
PADME Phobos and Deimos [64][65]

In Japan, the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS) is developing a sample return mission to Phobos,[66][67] due to launch in 2024. This mission is called Martian Moons Exploration (MMX)[68] and is proposed as a flagship Strategic Large Mission.[69] MMX will build on the expertise the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) would gain through the Hayabusa2 and SLIM missions.[70] As of January 2018, MMX is set for launch in September 2024.[71]

Planned mission Target Reference
Martian Moons Exploration (MMX) Phobos and Deimos [68]

Three missions to land on Phobos have been launched; the Phobos program in the late 1980s saw the launch of Fobos 1 and Fobos 2, while the Fobos-Grunt sample return mission was launched in 2011. None of these missions were successful: Fobos 1 failed en route to Mars, Fobos 2 failed shortly before landing, and Fobos-Grunt never left low Earth orbit.

Launched mission Target Reference
Phobos 1 Phobos
Phobos 2 Phobos
Fobos-Grunt Phobos

Missions sent to the Martian system have returned data on Phobos and Deimos and missions specifically dedicated to the moons are a subset of missions Mars that often include dedicated goals to acquire data about these moons. An example of this is the imaging campaigns by Mars Express of the Mars moons.

Osiris-Rex 2 was a proposal to make OR a double mission, with the other one collecting samples from the two Mars moons.[72] In 2012, it was stated that this mission would be both the quickest and least expensive way to get samples from the Moons.[57]

The 'Red Rocks Project,' a part of Lockheed Martin's "Stepping Stones to Mars" program, proposed to explore Mars robotically from Deimos.[73][74]

Statistics Edit

Mission milestone by country Edit

Legend

  Achieved
  Failed attempt

Country Flyby Orbit Lander Rover Powered flight Phobos lander Phobos rover Phobos sample return
  United States
  China
  Soviet Union
  Russia
  ESA
  United Kingdom
  India
  United Arab Emirates
  Japan

Missions by organization/company Edit

Country Agency or company Successful Partial failure Failure Operational Gravity assist Total
  United States NASA 13 - 5 4 1 23
  Soviet Union Energia 1 6 10 - - 17
  Russia Roscosmos - 1 2 - - 3
  European Union ESA - 2 - - 1 3
  China CNSA 1 - 1 1 - 2
  India ISRO 1 - - - - 1
  United Arab Emirates UAESA 1 - - 1 - 1
  Japan ISAS - - 1 - - 1

Future missions Edit

Under development Edit

Mission Organization Launch Date Type
Martian Moons Exploration (MMX) Phobos Sample Return Mission JAXA
  Japan
September 2024[75][76] Orbiter/Lander
Escape and Plasma Acceleration and Dynamics Explorer mission (ESCAPADE)

Photon Blue and Gold

NASA
  United States
October 2024[77] 2 Orbiters
Mars Orbiter Mission 2 ISRO
  India
NET 2024[78][79] Orbiter[80][81]
Tianwen-2 / ZhengHe Asteroid Sample Return Mission[82] CNSA
  China
2025[83][84] 2027 flyby en route to 311P/PANSTARRS
Tianwen-3 Mars sample-return mission CNSA
  China
2028[85] Two spacecraft: one consists of orbiter and return module, the other lander, ascent module and a mobile sampling robot.
Expected sample return: July 2031[86]
TEREX-1[87] NICT, ISSL
  Japan
Mid 2020s Orbiter
Rosalind Franklin rover ESA
2028 Rover

Proposed missions Edit

Mission Organisation Proposed
launch
Type
MELOS rover JAXA
  Japan
2024 Rover and aircraft
SatRevolution

  Poland

2024[88][89] Orbiter
Mars-Grunt Roscosmos
  Russia
2024 Orbiter, lander, ascent vehicle, sample-return
Icebreaker Life NASA
  United States
2026 Lander
NASA-ESA Mars Sample Return NASA
  United States
ESA
  EU
NET 2030[90][91] Orbiter/Lander/Return vehicle
Next Mars Orbiter (NeMO) NASA
  United States
Late 2020s[92] Telecomm orbiter[93] (originally proposed for 2022)
Deimos and Phobos Interior Explorer (DePhine) ESA
2030 Orbiter and Martian moon flybys
Mars MetNet FMI
  Finland
IKI
  Russia
INTA
  Spain
TBD Impactors
Mars Geyser Hopper NASA
  United States
TBD Hopper
Mars Micro Orbiter (MMO) NASA
  United States
? Orbiter
Phobos And Deimos & Mars Environment NASA
  United States
? Orbiter
Biological Oxidant and Life Detection (BOLD) Washington State University
  United States
? Landing probes and Impactors
Mars Exploration Ice Mapper NASA (withdrawn)[94]
  United States
Canadian Space Agency
  Canada
Italian Space Agency
  Italy
? Orbiter

Unrealized concepts Edit

1970s Edit

  • Mars 4NM and Mars 5NM – projects intended by the Soviet Union for heavy Marsokhod (in 1973 according to initial plan of 1970) and Mars sample return (planned for 1975). The missions were to be launched on the failed N1 rocket.[95]
  • Mars 5M (Mars-79) – double-launching Soviet sample return mission planned to 1979 but cancelled due to complexity and technical problems
  • Voyager-Mars – USA, 1970s – Two orbiters and two landers, launched by a single Saturn V rocket.

1990s Edit

  • Vesta – the multiaimed Soviet mission, developed in cooperation with European countries for realisation in 1991–1994 but canceled due to the Soviet Union disbanding, included the flyby of Mars with delivering the aerostat and small landers or penetrators followed by flybys of 1 Ceres or 4 Vesta and some other asteroids with impact of penetrator on the one of them.
  • Mars Aerostat – Russian/French balloon part for cancelled Vesta mission and then for failed Mars 96 mission,[96] originally planned for the 1992 launch window, postponed to 1994 and then to 1996 before being cancelled.[97]
  • Mars Together, combined U.S. and Russian mission study in the 1990s. To be launched by a Molniya with possible U.S. orbiter or lander.[98][99]
  • Mars Environmental Survey – set of 16 landers planned for 1999–2009
  • Mars-98 – Russian mission including an orbiter, lander, and rover, planned for 1998 launch opportunity as repeat of failed Mars 96 mission; cancelled due to lack of funding

2000s Edit

  • Mars Surveyor 2001 Lander – October 2001 – Mars lander (refurbished, became Phoenix lander)
  • Kitty Hawk – Mars airplane micromission, proposed for 17 December 2003, the centennial of the Wright brothers' first flight.[100] Its funding was eventually given to the 2003 Mars Network project.[101]
  • NetLander – 2007 or 2009 – Mars netlanders
  • Beagle 3 – 2009 British lander mission meant to search for life, past or present.[clarification needed]
  • Mars Telecommunications Orbiter – September 2009 – Mars orbiter for telecommunications

2010s Edit

  • Mars One - announced in 2012, planned to land a demo lander on Mars by 2016, with a crewed landing to follow by 2023. These dates were delayed multiple times, and the project was eventually cancelled, with the company going bankrupt in 2019
  • Sky-Sailor – 2014 – Plane developed by Switzerland to take detailed pictures of Mars surface
  • Mars Astrobiology Explorer-Cacher – 2018 rover concept, cancelled due to budget cuts in 2011. Sample cache goal later moved to Mars 2020 rover.[102]
  • Red Dragon – Derivative of a Dragon 2 capsule by SpaceX, designed to land by aerobraking and retropropulsion. Planned for 2018, then 2020. Canceled in favor of the Starship system.
  • Tumbleweed rover, wind-propelled sphere[103]
 
NASA missions to Mars (28 September 2021)
(Perseverance rover/Ingenuity Mars Helicopter; InSight lander; Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter; Odyssey orbiter; Curiosity rover; MAVEN orbiter)

See also Edit

References Edit

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  2. ^ "Pathfinder Rover Gets Its Name".
  3. ^ "Russia's unmanned missions to Mars". www.russianspaceweb.com. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  4. ^ a b c . ResearchGate. doi:10.13140/rg.2.2.29797.65768. Archived from the original on 10 December 2018.
  5. ^ a b c Smith, Kiona N. (30 May 2017). "The Mariner 9 Spacecraft And The Race To Orbit Mars". Forbes. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  6. ^ "Missions to Mars". The Planetary Society.
  7. ^ NASA Space Science Data Center, Mars 2 Lander. Retrieved 11 Feb. 2021.
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  11. ^ "The First Rover on Mars - The Soviets Did It in 1971". Planetary Society. The Mars 2 and 3 rover, which landed on Mars in 1971.
  12. ^ a b "Mars 3 Spacecraft and Subsystems, NSSDCA cat". Retrieved 11 February 2021.
  13. ^ NASA Space Science Data Center, Mars 3 Lander. Retrieved 11 Feb. 2021.
  14. ^ Pyle, Rod (2012). Destination Mars. Prometheus Books. pp. 73–78. ISBN 978-1-61614-589-7. It was the first spacecraft to enter orbit around another world.
  15. ^ "Soviet Mars Images".
  16. ^ NSSDC - Mars 6
  17. ^ . NASA. Archived from the original on 2 April 2012. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  18. ^ "Mars Pathfinder Welcome to Mars Sol 86 (1 October 1997) Images". 1 October 1997. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  19. ^ "ESA - Beautiful new images from Rosetta's approach to Mars: OSIRIS UPDATE". Esa.int. 24 February 2007. Retrieved 16 January 2012.
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  21. ^ Brown, Dwayne; Neal-Jones, Nancy; Zubritsky, Elizabeth (21 September 2014). "NASA's Newest Mars Mission Spacecraft Enters Orbit around Red Planet". NASA. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
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  28. ^ "NASA InSight – Dec. 19, 2022 – Mars InSight". blogs.nasa.gov. 19 December 2022. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
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  31. ^ "UAE's Hope Probe on its Way to Glory". 9 February 2021. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
  32. ^ "The UAE's Hope Probe has successfully entered orbit around Mars". cnn.com. 9 February 2021. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
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  35. ^ "CGNT on twitter". 14 May 2021. Retrieved 14 May 2021. China's Tianwen-1 probe lands on
  36. ^ "The scientific image map was unveiled, and it was a one-time tour! my country's first Mars exploration mission was a complete success". Retrieved 6 June 2021. The picture of the "touring group photo" shows the rover traveling about 10 meters south of the landing platform, releasing the separate camera installed at the bottom of the vehicle, and then retreating to the vicinity of the landing platform.
  37. ^ "New Year's Day greetings-China National Space Administration releases the images returned by the Tianwen-1 probe". 1 January 2022.
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  40. ^ "Mars Helicopter". NASA Mars. Retrieved 30 July 2020. A technology demonstration to test the first powered flight on Mars.
  41. ^ First Flight of the Ingenuity Mars Helicopter: Live from Mission Control. NASA. 19 April 2021. Retrieved 19 April 2021 – via YouTube.
  42. ^ "NASA launches a spacecraft to visit Psyche, an unseen metal world". 13 October 2023.
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list, missions, mars, launches, mars, decade1960s, 121970s, 111980s, 21990s, 62000s, 82010s, 62020s, 4this, list, spacecraft, missions, including, unsuccessful, ones, relating, planet, mars, such, orbiters, rovers, contents, missions, landing, locations, timel. Launches to Mars Decade1960s 121970s 111980s 21990s 62000s 82010s 62020s 4This is a list of the 50 spacecraft missions including unsuccessful ones relating to the planet Mars such as orbiters and rovers Contents 1 Missions 2 Landing locations 2 1 Timeline 3 Missions to the moons of Mars 4 Statistics 4 1 Mission milestone by country 4 2 Missions by organization company 5 Future missions 5 1 Under development 5 2 Proposed missions 6 Unrealized concepts 6 1 1970s 6 2 1990s 6 3 2000s 6 4 2010s 7 See also 8 ReferencesMissions EditMission Type Legend Mission to Mars Gravity assist destination elsewhere1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 Mission Spacecraft Launch Date Operator Mission Type 1 Outcome 2 Remarks Carrier rocket 3 1M No 1 1M No 1 10 October 1960 OKB 1 nbsp Soviet Union Flyby Launch failure Failed to achieve Earth orbit Molniya1M No 2 1M No 2 14 October 1960 OKB 1 nbsp Soviet Union Flyby Launch failure Failed to achieve Earth orbit Molniya2MV 4 No 1 2MV 4 No 1 24 October 1962 nbsp Soviet Union Flyby Launch failure Booster stage Block L disintegrated in LEO MolniyaMars 1 Mars 1 2MV 4 No 2 1 November 1962 nbsp Soviet Union Flyby Spacecraft failure Communications lost before first flyby Molniya2MV 3 No 1 2MV 3 No 1 4 November 1962 nbsp Soviet Union Lander Launch failure Never left LEO MolniyaMariner 3 Mariner 3 5 November 1964 NASA nbsp United States Flyby Launch failure Payload fairing failed to separate Atlas LV 3 Agena DMariner 4 Mariner 4 28 November 1964 NASA nbsp United States Flyby Successful First successful flyby of Mars on 15 July 1965 Atlas LV 3 Agena DZond 2 Zond 2 3MV 4A No 2 30 November 1964 nbsp Soviet Union Flyby Spacecraft failure Communications lost before flyby MolniyaMariner 6 Mariner 6 25 February 1969 NASA nbsp United States Flyby Successful Atlas SLV 3C Centaur D2M No 521 2M No 521 1969A 4 27 March 1969 nbsp Soviet Union Orbiter Launch failure Failed to achieve Earth orbit Proton K DMariner 7 Mariner 7 27 March 1969 NASA nbsp United States Flyby Successful Atlas SLV 3C Centaur D2M No 522 2M No 522 1969B 4 2 April 1969 nbsp Soviet Union Orbiter Launch failure Failed to achieve Earth orbit Proton K DMariner 8 Mariner 8 9 May 1971 NASA nbsp United States Orbiter Launch failure Failed to achieve Earth orbit Atlas SLV 3C Centaur DKosmos 419 Kosmos 419 3MS No 170 10 May 1971 nbsp Soviet Union Orbiter Launch failure Never left LEO booster stage burn timer set incorrectly Proton K DMars 2 Mars 2 4M No 171 19 May 1971 nbsp Soviet Union Orbiter Successful On November 27 it became in short sequence the second spacecraft to orbit another planet 5 Operated for 362 orbits 6 Proton K DMars 2 lander SA 4M No 171 Lander Spacecraft failure First lander to impact Mars Deployed from Mars 2 failed to land during attempt on 27 November 1971 7 Prop M Rover FailureLost with Mars 2 First rover to impact Mars Lost when the Mars 2 lander crashed into the surface of Mars Mars 3 Mars 3 4M No 172 28 May 1971 nbsp Soviet Union Orbiter Successful On December 2 it became in short sequence the third spacecraft to orbit another planet 5 Operated for 20 orbits 8 9 Proton K DMars 3 lander SA 4M No 172 Lander Partial success 10 11 First lander to make a soft landing on Mars Landed on 2 December 1971 First partial image 70 lines transmitted showing gray background with no details 8 Contact lost 20 seconds after transmission started 110 seconds after landing 12 13 Prop M Rover Carrier vehicle failed before rover was deployed First rover to make a soft landing on another planet 4 5 kg 9 9 lb rover connected to the Mars 3 lander by a tether Deployment status unknown due to loss of communications with the Mars 3 lander 12 Mariner 9 Mariner 9 30 May 1971 NASA nbsp United States Orbiter Successful 14 First spacecraft to orbit another planet two weeks ahead of Mars 2 on November 14 5 Deactivated 516 days after entering orbit Atlas SLV 3C Centaur DMars 4 Mars 4 3MS No 52S 21 July 1973 nbsp Soviet Union Orbiter Partial success 15 Failed to perform orbital insertion burn Returned photographs of Mars during flyby Proton K DMars 5 Mars 5 3MS No 53S 25 July 1973 nbsp Soviet Union Orbiter Successful Contact lost after 9 days in Mars orbit Returned 180 frames Proton K DMars 6 Mars 6 3MP No 50P 5 August 1973 nbsp Soviet Union Flyby Successful Flyby bus collected data 16 Proton K DMars 6 lander Lander Spacecraft failure Contact lost upon landing atmospheric data mostly unusable Mars 7 Mars 7 3MP No 51P 9 August 1973 nbsp Soviet Union Flyby Successful Flyby bus collected data Proton K DMars 7 lander Lander Spacecraft failure Separated from coast stage prematurely failed to enter Martian atmosphere Viking 1 Viking 1 orbiter 20 August 1975 NASA nbsp United States Orbiter Successful Operated for 1385 orbits Entered Mars orbit on 19 June 1976 Titan IIIE Centaur D1TViking 1 lander Lander Successful First successful Mars lander Deployed from Viking 1 orbiter Landed on Mars on 20 July 1976 Operated for 2245 sols Viking 2 Viking 2 orbiter 9 September 1975 NASA nbsp United States Orbiter Successful Operated for 700 orbits Entered Mars orbit on 7 August 1976 Titan IIIE Centaur D1TViking 2 lander Lander Successful Deployed from Viking 2 orbiter Landed on Mars on September 1976 Operated for 1281 sols 11 April 1980 Phobos 1 Phobos 1 1F No 101 7 July 1988 nbsp Soviet Union Orbiter Spacecraft failure Communications lost before reaching Mars failed to enter orbit Proton K D 2DAS Phobos lander FailureLost with Phobos 1 To have been deployed by Phobos 1Phobos 2 Phobos 2 1F No 102 12 July 1988 nbsp Soviet Union Orbiter Mostly successful Orbital observations successful communications lost before lander deployment Proton K D 2Prop F Phobos rover FailureLost with Phobos 2 To have been deployed by Phobos 2DAS Phobos lander FailureLost with Phobos 2 To have been deployed by Phobos 2Mars Observer Mars Observer 25 September 1992 NASA nbsp United States Orbiter Spacecraft failure Lost communications before orbital insertion Commercial Titan IIIMars Global Surveyor Mars Global Surveyor 7 November 1996 NASA nbsp United States Orbiter Successful Operated for ten years Delta II 7925Mars 96 Mars 96 M1 No 520 Mars 8 4 16 November 1996 Rosaviakosmos nbsp Russia OrbiterPenetrators Spacecraft failure Never left LEO Proton K D 2Mars 96 lander Lander FailureLost with Mars 96 Two Mars landers to have been deployed by Mars 96 Mars 96 lander Lander FailureLost with Mars 96Mars 96 penetrator Penetrator FailureLost with Mars 96 Two Mars Penetrators to have been deployed by Mars 96 Mars 96 penetrator Penetrator FailureLost with Mars 96Mars Pathfinder Mars Pathfinder 4 December 1996 NASA nbsp United States Lander Successful Landed at 19 13 N 33 22 W on 4 July 1997 17 Last contact on 27 September 1997 Delta II 7925Sojourner Rover Successful First rover to operate on another planet Operated for 84 days 18 Nozomi Nozomi PLANET B 3 July 1998 ISAS nbsp Japan Orbiter Spacecraft failure Performed a Mars flyby Later contact lost due to loss of fuel M VMars Climate Orbiter Mars Climate Orbiter 11 December 1998 NASA nbsp United States Orbiter Spacecraft failure Approached Mars too closely during orbit insertion attempt due to a software interface bug involving different units for impulse and either burned up in the atmosphere or entered solar orbit Delta II 7425Mars Polar Lander Deep Space 2 Mars Polar Lander 3 January 1999 NASA nbsp United States Lander Spacecraft failure Failed to function after landing Delta II 7425Deep Space 2 Penetrator Spacecraft failure No data transmitted after deployment from MPL Deep Space 2 Penetrator Spacecraft failureMars Odyssey Mars Odyssey 7 April 2001 NASA nbsp United States Orbiter Operational Expected to remain operational until 2025 Delta II 7925Mars Express Mars Express 2 June 2003 ESA Orbiter Operational Enough fuel to remain operational until 2035 Soyuz FG FregatBeagle 2 ESA nbsp United Kingdom Lander Lander failure No communications received after release from Mars Express Orbital images of landing site suggest a successful landing but two solar panels failed to deploy obstructing its communications Spirit Spirit MER A 10 June 2003 NASA nbsp United States Rover Successful Landed on 4 January 2004 Operated for 2208 sols Delta II 7925Opportunity Opportunity MER B 8 July 2003 NASA nbsp United States Rover Successful Landed on 25 January 2004 Operated for 5351 sols Delta II 7925HRosetta Rosetta 2 March 2004 ESA Flyby Gravity assist Successful Flyby in February 2007 en route to 67P Churyumov Gerasimenko 19 Ariane 5G Philae Flyby Gravity assist SuccessfulMars Reconnaissance Orbiter Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter 12 August 2005 NASA nbsp United States Orbiter Operational Entered orbit on 10 March 2006 Atlas V 401Phoenix Phoenix 4 August 2007 NASA nbsp United States Lander Successful Landed on 25 May 2008 End of mission 2 November 2008 Delta II 7925Dawn Dawn 27 September 2007 NASA nbsp United States Flyby Gravity assist Successful Flyby in February 2009 en route to 4 Vesta and Ceres Delta II 7925HFobos Grunt Yinghuo 1 Fobos Grunt 8 November 2011 Roskosmos nbsp Russia OrbiterPhobos sample return Spacecraft failure Never left LEO intended to depart under own power Zenit 2MYinghuo 1 CNSA nbsp China Orbiter FailureLost with Fobos Grunt To have been deployed by Fobos GruntMars Science Laboratory Curiosity Mars Science Laboratory 26 November 2011 NASA nbsp United States Rover Operational Landed on 6 August 2012 Atlas V 541Mars Orbiter Mission Mars Orbiter Mission 5 November 2013 ISRO nbsp India Orbiter Successful Entered orbit on 24 September 2014 Mission extended to 2022 where the mission concluded on September 27 2022 after contact was lost 20 PSLV XLMAVEN MAVEN 18 November 2013 NASA nbsp United States Orbiter Operational Orbit insertion on 22 September 2014 21 Atlas V 401ExoMars 2016 ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter 14 March 2016 ESA RoscosmosESA nbsp Russia Orbiter Operational Entered orbit on 19 October 2016 Proton M Briz MSchiaparelli EDM lander ESA Lander Spacecraft failure Carried by the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter Although the lander crashed 22 23 engineering data on the first five minutes of entry was successfully retrieved 24 25 InSight InSight 5 May 2018 26 27 NASA nbsp United States Lander Successful Landed on 26 November 2018 Last contact 15 December 2022 28 Atlas V 401MarCO A Flyby Successful Flyby 26 November 2018 Last contact 29 December 2018 MarCO B Flyby Successful Flyby 26 November 2018 Last contact 4 January 2019 Emirates Mars Mission Hope 19 July 2020 29 MBRSC nbsp United Arab Emirates Orbiter Operational Entered orbit on 9 February 2021 30 31 32 H IIATianwen 1 Tianwen 1 orbiter 23 July 2020 33 34 CNSA nbsp China Orbiter Operational Entered orbit on 10 February 2021 Long March 5Tianwen 1 lander Lander Successful Landed on 14 May 2021Zhurong rover Rover Operational Landed on 14 May 2021 35 Deployed by the Tianwen 1 lander on 22 May 2021 Tianwen 1 Remote Camera Lander Successful Landed on 14 May 2021 Deployed by the Zhurong rover on 1 June 2021 36 Tianwen 1 Deployable Camera 2 37 Orbiter Successful Entered orbit on 10 February 2021 deployed 31 December 2021Mars 2020 Perseverance 30 July 2020 38 NASA nbsp United States Rover Operational Landed on 18 February 2021 39 Atlas V 541Ingenuity Helicopter Operational First aerodynamic flight on another planet Landed with Perseverance rover on 18 February 2021 40 Deployed from rover on 3 April 2021 First flight achieved on April 19 2021 41 Psyche Psyche 13 October 2023 NASA nbsp United States Flyby Gravity assist Enroute Gravity assist en route to 16 Psyche in May 2026 42 Falcon HeavyLanding locations Edit nbsp Interactive image map of the global topography of Mars overlaid with the position of Martian rovers and landers Coloring of the base map indicates relative elevations of Martian surface nbsp Clickable image Clicking on the labels will open a new article Legend Active white lined Inactive Planned dash lined view discuss nbsp Beagle 2 nbsp Curiosity nbsp Deep Space 2 nbsp Rosalind Franklin nbsp InSight nbsp Mars 2 nbsp Mars 3 nbsp Mars 6 nbsp Mars Polar Lander nbsp Opportunity nbsp Perseverance nbsp Phoenix nbsp Schiaparelli EDM nbsp Sojourner nbsp Spirit nbsp Zhurong nbsp Viking 1 nbsp Viking 2 nbsp Mars landing sites 16 December 2020 In 1999 Mars Climate Orbiter accidentally entered Mars atmosphere and either burnt up or left Mars orbit on an unknown trajectory citation needed There are a number of derelict spacecraft orbiting Mars whose location is not known precisely There is a proposal to use the Optical Navigation Camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter to search for small moons dust rings and old orbiters 43 As of 2016 there were believed to be eight derelict spacecraft in orbit around Mars barring unforeseen event 44 The Viking 1 orbiter was not expected to decay until at least 2019 45 Mariner 9 which entered Mars orbit in 1971 was expected to remain in orbit until approximately 2022 when it was projected to enter the Martian atmosphere and either burn up or crash into the planet s surface 46 See also List of Mars orbiters Timeline EditMissions to the moons of Mars Edit nbsp Phobos Stickney Crater nbsp Deimos lower left and Phobos lower right compared with the asteroid 951 Gaspra nbsp Phobos by Mars Global Surveyor in 1998 47 There have also have been proposed missions dedicated to explore the two moons of Mars Phobos and Deimos Many missions to Mars have also included dedicated observations of the moons while this section is about missions focused solely on them There have been three unsuccessful dedicated missions and many proposals Because of the proximity of the Mars moons to Mars any mission to them may also be considered a mission to Mars from some perspectives There have been at least three proposals in the United States Discovery Program including PADME PANDORA and MERLIN 48 The ESA has also considered a sample return mission one of the latest known as Martian Moon Sample Return or MMSR and it may use heritage from an asteroid sample return mission 49 Proposal Target ReferenceAladdin Phobos and Deimos 50 DePhine Phobos and Deimos 51 DSR Deimos 52 Gulliver Deimos 53 Hall Phobos and Deimos 54 M PADS Phobos and Deimos 55 Merlin Phobos and Deimos 56 MMSR 2011 ver Phobos or Deimos 49 OSRIS REx 2 Phobos or Deimos 57 Pandora Phobos and Deimos 48 PCROSS Phobos 58 Phobos Surveyor Phobos 59 PRIME Phobos 60 Fobos Grunt 2 Phobos 61 Phootprint Phobos 62 63 PADME Phobos and Deimos 64 65 In Japan the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science ISAS is developing a sample return mission to Phobos 66 67 due to launch in 2024 This mission is called Martian Moons Exploration MMX 68 and is proposed as a flagship Strategic Large Mission 69 MMX will build on the expertise the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency JAXA would gain through the Hayabusa2 and SLIM missions 70 As of January 2018 MMX is set for launch in September 2024 71 Planned mission Target ReferenceMartian Moons Exploration MMX Phobos and Deimos 68 Three missions to land on Phobos have been launched the Phobos program in the late 1980s saw the launch of Fobos 1 and Fobos 2 while the Fobos Grunt sample return mission was launched in 2011 None of these missions were successful Fobos 1 failed en route to Mars Fobos 2 failed shortly before landing and Fobos Grunt never left low Earth orbit Launched mission Target ReferencePhobos 1 PhobosPhobos 2 PhobosFobos Grunt PhobosMissions sent to the Martian system have returned data on Phobos and Deimos and missions specifically dedicated to the moons are a subset of missions Mars that often include dedicated goals to acquire data about these moons An example of this is the imaging campaigns by Mars Express of the Mars moons Osiris Rex 2 was a proposal to make OR a double mission with the other one collecting samples from the two Mars moons 72 In 2012 it was stated that this mission would be both the quickest and least expensive way to get samples from the Moons 57 The Red Rocks Project a part of Lockheed Martin s Stepping Stones to Mars program proposed to explore Mars robotically from Deimos 73 74 Statistics EditMission milestone by country Edit Legend Achieved Failed attempt Country Flyby Orbit Lander Rover Powered flight Phobos lander Phobos rover Phobos sample return nbsp United States nbsp China nbsp Soviet Union nbsp Russia nbsp ESA nbsp United Kingdom nbsp India nbsp United Arab Emirates nbsp Japan Missions by organization company Edit Country Agency or company Successful Partial failure Failure Operational Gravity assist Total nbsp United States NASA 13 5 4 1 23 nbsp Soviet Union Energia 1 6 10 17 nbsp Russia Roscosmos 1 2 3 nbsp European Union ESA 2 1 3 nbsp China CNSA 1 1 1 2 nbsp India ISRO 1 1 nbsp United Arab Emirates UAESA 1 1 1 nbsp Japan ISAS 1 1Future missions EditUnder development Edit Mission Organization Launch Date TypeMartian Moons Exploration MMX Phobos Sample Return Mission JAXA nbsp Japan September 2024 75 76 Orbiter LanderEscape and Plasma Acceleration and Dynamics Explorer mission ESCAPADE Photon Blue and Gold NASA nbsp United States October 2024 77 2 OrbitersMars Orbiter Mission 2 ISRO nbsp India NET 2024 78 79 Orbiter 80 81 Tianwen 2 ZhengHe Asteroid Sample Return Mission 82 CNSA nbsp China 2025 83 84 2027 flyby en route to 311P PANSTARRSTianwen 3 Mars sample return mission CNSA nbsp China 2028 85 Two spacecraft one consists of orbiter and return module the other lander ascent module and a mobile sampling robot Expected sample return July 2031 86 TEREX 1 87 NICT ISSL nbsp Japan Mid 2020s OrbiterRosalind Franklin rover ESA 2028 RoverProposed missions Edit Mission Organisation Proposedlaunch TypeMELOS rover JAXA nbsp Japan 2024 Rover and aircraftSatRevolution nbsp Poland 2024 88 89 OrbiterMars Grunt Roscosmos nbsp Russia 2024 Orbiter lander ascent vehicle sample returnIcebreaker Life NASA nbsp United States 2026 LanderNASA ESA Mars Sample Return NASA nbsp United StatesESA nbsp EU NET 2030 90 91 Orbiter Lander Return vehicleNext Mars Orbiter NeMO NASA nbsp United States Late 2020s 92 Telecomm orbiter 93 originally proposed for 2022 Deimos and Phobos Interior Explorer DePhine ESA 2030 Orbiter and Martian moon flybysMars MetNet FMI nbsp FinlandIKI nbsp RussiaINTA nbsp Spain TBD ImpactorsMars Geyser Hopper NASA nbsp United States TBD HopperMars Micro Orbiter MMO NASA nbsp United States OrbiterPhobos And Deimos amp Mars Environment NASA nbsp United States OrbiterBiological Oxidant and Life Detection BOLD Washington State University nbsp United States Landing probes and ImpactorsMars Exploration Ice Mapper NASA withdrawn 94 nbsp United StatesCanadian Space Agency nbsp CanadaItalian Space Agency nbsp Italy OrbiterUnrealized concepts Edit1970s Edit Mars 4NM and Mars 5NM projects intended by the Soviet Union for heavy Marsokhod in 1973 according to initial plan of 1970 and Mars sample return planned for 1975 The missions were to be launched on the failed N1 rocket 95 Mars 5M Mars 79 double launching Soviet sample return mission planned to 1979 but cancelled due to complexity and technical problems Voyager Mars USA 1970s Two orbiters and two landers launched by a single Saturn V rocket 1990s Edit Vesta the multiaimed Soviet mission developed in cooperation with European countries for realisation in 1991 1994 but canceled due to the Soviet Union disbanding included the flyby of Mars with delivering the aerostat and small landers or penetrators followed by flybys of 1 Ceres or 4 Vesta and some other asteroids with impact of penetrator on the one of them Mars Aerostat Russian French balloon part for cancelled Vesta mission and then for failed Mars 96 mission 96 originally planned for the 1992 launch window postponed to 1994 and then to 1996 before being cancelled 97 Mars Together combined U S and Russian mission study in the 1990s To be launched by a Molniya with possible U S orbiter or lander 98 99 Mars Environmental Survey set of 16 landers planned for 1999 2009 Mars 98 Russian mission including an orbiter lander and rover planned for 1998 launch opportunity as repeat of failed Mars 96 mission cancelled due to lack of funding2000s Edit Mars Surveyor 2001 Lander October 2001 Mars lander refurbished became Phoenix lander Kitty Hawk Mars airplane micromission proposed for 17 December 2003 the centennial of the Wright brothers first flight 100 Its funding was eventually given to the 2003 Mars Network project 101 NetLander 2007 or 2009 Mars netlanders Beagle 3 2009 British lander mission meant to search for life past or present clarification needed Mars Telecommunications Orbiter September 2009 Mars orbiter for telecommunications2010s Edit Mars One announced in 2012 planned to land a demo lander on Mars by 2016 with a crewed landing to follow by 2023 These dates were delayed multiple times and the project was eventually cancelled with the company going bankrupt in 2019 Sky Sailor 2014 Plane developed by Switzerland to take detailed pictures of Mars surface Mars Astrobiology Explorer Cacher 2018 rover concept cancelled due to budget cuts in 2011 Sample cache goal later moved to Mars 2020 rover 102 Red Dragon Derivative of a Dragon 2 capsule by SpaceX designed to land by aerobraking and retropropulsion Planned for 2018 then 2020 Canceled in favor of the Starship system Tumbleweed rover wind propelled sphere 103 nbsp NASA missions to Mars 28 September 2021 Perseverance rover Ingenuity Mars Helicopter InSight lander Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Odyssey orbiter Curiosity rover MAVEN orbiter See also EditExploration of Mars Mars flyby Satellites of Mars Mars landing Mars rover List of artificial objects on Mars Comparison of embedded computer systems on board the Mars rovers Human mission to Mars Timeline of Solar System exploration List of artificial objects on extraterrestrial surfaces List of missions to the Moon List of missions to VenusReferences Edit Chronology of Mars Exploration NASA Retrieved on 1 December 2011 Pathfinder Rover Gets Its Name Russia s unmanned missions to Mars www russianspaceweb com Retrieved 12 February 2021 a b c Chronology of Mars Missions ResearchGate doi 10 13140 rg 2 2 29797 65768 Archived from the original on 10 December 2018 a b c Smith Kiona N 30 May 2017 The Mariner 9 Spacecraft And The Race To Orbit Mars Forbes Retrieved 16 February 2022 Missions to Mars The Planetary Society NASA Space Science Data Center Mars 2 Lander Retrieved 11 Feb 2021 a b Perminov V G July 1999 The Difficult Road to Mars A Brief History of Mars Exploration in the Soviet Union NASA Headquarters History Division pp 34 60 ISBN 0 16 058859 6 Webster Guy 11 April 2013 NASA Mars Orbiter Images May Show 1971 Soviet Lander NASA Retrieved 12 April 2013 Mars 3 Lander NASA Mars 3 was the first spacecraft to make a successful soft landing on Mars The First Rover on Mars The Soviets Did It in 1971 Planetary Society The Mars 2 and 3 rover which landed on Mars in 1971 a b Mars 3 Spacecraft and Subsystems NSSDCA cat Retrieved 11 February 2021 NASA Space Science Data Center Mars 3 Lander Retrieved 11 Feb 2021 Pyle Rod 2012 Destination Mars Prometheus Books pp 73 78 ISBN 978 1 61614 589 7 It was the first spacecraft to enter orbit around another world Soviet Mars Images NSSDC Mars 6 Mars Pathfinder Science Results NASA Archived from the original on 2 April 2012 Retrieved 20 September 2015 Mars Pathfinder Welcome to Mars Sol 86 1 October 1997 Images 1 October 1997 Retrieved 12 February 2021 ESA Beautiful new images from Rosetta s approach to Mars OSIRIS UPDATE Esa int 24 February 2007 Retrieved 16 January 2012 Ray Kalyan 8 February 2017 Isro Mars orbiter mission life extended up to 2020 Deccan Herald Retrieved 12 February 2021 Brown Dwayne Neal Jones Nancy Zubritsky Elizabeth 21 September 2014 NASA s Newest Mars Mission Spacecraft Enters Orbit around Red Planet NASA Retrieved 22 September 2014 Clark Stephen 24 May 2017 Probe into crash of ESA lander recommends more checks on ExoMars descent craft Spaceflight Now Retrieved 21 November 2018 Weak Simulations Inadequate Software amp Mismanagement caused Schiaparelli Crash Landing Spaceflight101 24 May 2017 Retrieved 21 November 2018 Chan Sewell 20 October 2016 No Signal From Mars Lander but European Officials Declare Mission a Success New York Times Retrieved 20 October 2016 Wall Mike 21 October 2016 ExoMars 96 Percent Successful Despite Lander Crash ESA Space com Retrieved 21 October 2016 Clark Stephen 9 March 2016 InSight Mars lander escapes cancellation aims for 2018 launch Spaceflight Now Retrieved 9 March 2016 Chang Kenneth 9 March 2016 NASA Reschedules Mars InSight Mission for May 2018 New York Times Retrieved 9 March 2016 NASA InSight Dec 19 2022 Mars InSight blogs nasa gov 19 December 2022 Retrieved 20 December 2022 Live coverage Launch of Emirates Mars Mission rescheduled for Sunday Spaceflight Now 14 July 2020 Retrieved 19 July 2020 UAE s Hope probe to be first in trio of Mars missions Phys Org 7 February 2021 Retrieved 8 February 2021 UAE s Hope Probe on its Way to Glory 9 February 2021 Retrieved 3 March 2021 The UAE s Hope Probe has successfully entered orbit around Mars cnn com 9 February 2021 Retrieved 9 February 2021 Amos Jonathan 23 July 2020 China s Mars rover rockets away from Earth BBC News Retrieved 23 July 2020 天外送祝福 月圆迎华诞 天问一号以 自拍国旗 祝福祖国71华诞 Weixin Official Accounts Platform Retrieved 1 October 2020 CGNT on twitter 14 May 2021 Retrieved 14 May 2021 China s Tianwen 1 probe lands on The scientific image map was unveiled and it was a one time tour my country s first Mars exploration mission was a complete success Retrieved 6 June 2021 The picture of the touring group photo shows the rover traveling about 10 meters south of the landing platform releasing the separate camera installed at the bottom of the vehicle and then retreating to the vicinity of the landing platform New Year s Day greetings China National Space Administration releases the images returned by the Tianwen 1 probe 1 January 2022 Nasa Mars rover Perseverance launches from Florida BBC News 30 July 2020 Retrieved 30 July 2020 mars nasa gov Mars 2020 Perseverance Rover mars nasa gov Retrieved 30 July 2020 Mars Helicopter NASA Mars Retrieved 30 July 2020 A technology demonstration to test the first powered flight on Mars First Flight of the Ingenuity Mars Helicopter Live from Mission Control NASA 19 April 2021 Retrieved 19 April 2021 via YouTube NASA launches a spacecraft to visit Psyche an unseen metal world 13 October 2023 Adler Mark Owen W Riedel J Concepts and Approaches for Mars Exploration 2012 PDF Retrieved 12 February 2021 A Chronology of Mars Exploration NASA Retrieved 12 February 2021 Viking 1 Orbiter NASA Retrieved 12 February 2021 NASA This Month in NASA History Mariner 9 29 November 2011 Vol 4 Issue 9 JPL Jet Propulsion Laboratory a b MERLIN The Creative Choices Behind a Proposal to Explore the Martian Moons Merlin and PADME info also a b Michel P Agnolon D Brucato J Gondet B Korablev O Koschny D 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the Martian Moon Phobos Universe Today Retrieved 5 October 2014 Introduction to JAXA s Exploration of the Two Moons of Mars with Sample Return from Phobos PDF Phobos Deimos Sample Return Mission Study Team 26 October 2015 Retrieved 22 December 2015 JAXA 火星衛星 フォボス 探査 22年に The Yomiuri Shimbun in Japanese 4 January 2016 Archived from the original on 4 January 2016 Retrieved 4 February 2016 a b ISASニュース 2016 1 No 418 PDF in Japanese Institute of Space and Astronautical Science 22 January 2016 Retrieved 4 February 2016 宇宙科学 探査分野 工程表取り組み状況について その3 PDF in Japanese Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency 13 October 2015 Retrieved 21 December 2015 Torishima Shinya 19 June 2015 JAXAの 火星の衛星からのサンプル リターン 計画とは Mynavi News in Japanese Retrieved 6 October 2015 MMX Homepage Archived 5 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine JAXA 2017 Elifritz T L OSIRIS REx II to Mars Mars Sample Return from Phobos and Deimos A Mars Mission Proposal PDF Universities Space Research Association Retrieved 12 February 2021 Larry 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