NASA suspends Mars mission over faulty instrument

  24 December 2015    Read: 1842
NASA suspends Mars mission over faulty instrument
The US space agency, Nasa, has suspended the March launch of its next mission to Mars because of a fault in a key research instrument.
Nasa said a problem with a seismometer provided by the French space agency meant the launch could not go ahead.

It is feared the mission could now face a two-year delay.

The InSight spacecraft was scheduled to take off between 4-30 March and land on the Red Planet six months later to examine Mars` geology in depth.

Nasa said it had decided to call off the launch because the agency was unable to fix a leak affecting the seismometer, which required a vacuum seal to cope with harsh conditions on Mars.

The instrument is designed to measure ground movements.

"A decision on a path forward will be made in the coming months, but one thing is clear: Nasa remains fully committed to the scientific discovery and exploration of Mars," Nasa`s John Grunsfeld was quoted as saying by the AFP news agency.

The next time the earth and Mars are favourably aligned for a launch will be in 2018.

The mission is also intended to monitor the temperature on Mars, as well as the variations in its orbit.

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