Home Industry Technology UAE Hope Probe transitions to Science Orbit The mission’s two-year science data collection will formally commence on May 23, 2021 by Zainab Mansoor March 30, 2021 The UAE Hope Probe is now in its final orbit of Mars and ready for its two-year science data gathering phase, which defines the core aim of the mission. The Emirates Mars Mission (EMM) had commenced its transition from its capture orbit to its science orbit with the completion of a 510 second (8.36 minutes) burn of its thrusters, it announced on March 29. “Although the Hope probe is a huge achievement and a source of great national pride, its core objective, defined right from day one of this mission, is to build the first complete picture of Mars’ atmospheric dynamics,” said Omran Sharaf, EMM project director. “The TSM manoeuvre was critically important and I can say was the last truly scary moment for the mission because there was a very real risk of losing the spacecraft during this last burn. We’re now assessing the results of that burn, but I can say we are confident that we will not need a further large correction manoeuvre.” The transition saw the UAE Hope probe move from its 1,063 by 42,461 capture orbit to a 20,000 by 43,000 science orbit. The manoeuvre was the last scheduled ‘big burn’ in the spacecraft’s journey from its launch on July 20, 2020. The science phase will commence on April 14, with a number of calibration and test runs to establish a baseline for the efficient management of the measurements from the spacecraft’s three instruments. The mission’s two-year science data collection will formally commence on May 23, 2021, with data being made available globally in October. “Once we have established our stable science orbit and deployed our instruments, we can start building datasets and testing our systems with the live data,” said Hessa Al Matroushi, EMM Science Lead. “This is the data we will be processing, formatting and sharing with the world’s science and academic communities openly through our website.” Science data gathering consists of making repeated ‘passes’ around Mars and mapping each set of measurements to build a dynamic picture of the movement of dust, ice and water vapour throughout the planet’s atmospheric layers. The probe will capture variations in temperature, as well as measure hydrogen, oxygen, carbon monoxide and ozone. The elliptical 25-degree orbit of the Hope Probe enables a planet-wide, high resolution sample to be taken each 225 hours (9.5 days). “If you imagine spinning a basketball on your finger and then wrapping it with wool as it spins, you get an idea of how Hope covers the whole planet over consecutive orbits. While we’re doing that, we’re constantly measuring with two spectrometers and an imager. These three data streams combine to give us a holistic, powerful and unique picture of Mars’ atmosphere that we hope will answer many, many questions we have about the planet and our theories regarding its atmospheric loss,” said Al Matroushi. The Hope probe carries three science instruments: EXI – The Emirates eXploration Imager is a 12 megapixel digital camera that captures high-resolution images of Mars along with measuring water ice and ozone in the lower atmosphere through the UV bands. EMIRS – The Emirates Mars InfraRed Spectrometer collects information on surface and atmospheric temperatures and measures the global distribution of dust, ice cloud, and water vapour in the Martian lower atmosphere. EMUS – The Emirates Mars Ultraviolet Spectrometer measures oxygen and carbon monoxide in the thermosphere and the variability of hydrogen and oxygen in the exosphere. The spacecraft and its instruments were designed and developed by MBRSC engineers working with academic partners, including LASP at the University of Colorado, Boulder; Arizona State University and the University of California, Berkeley. On February 9, the UAE Hope Probe achieved its most critical task – the Mars orbit insertion – making the UAE the fifth country in the world to reach the red planet. Read: UAE Hope Probe achieves historic milestone, successfully enters Mars orbit Tags Data Emirates Mars Mission Science Orbit Spacecraft UAE Hope Probe 0 Comments You might also like How cloud technology is driving innovation in GCC banking sector UAE data laws: Cybercrime offenders to face up to 5 years in prison, huge fines UAE Ministry of Economy signs MoU with Presight to drive FDI The untold truth about startup failures: What most entrepreneurs don’t know