NASA's ESCAPADE Mission and SpaceX Starship Tests Accelerate Mars Exploration in 2024
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Rocket Lab has proposed a Mars Telecommunications Orbiter for NASA's $700 million Mars Telecommunications Network mission, Orbital Today announced on March 3. This orbiter aims to provide continuous communications relay, essential for future rovers, orbiters, and human missions, enhancing data flow from the Martian surface.
Looking ahead to the 2026 Mars transfer window, NASA's twin ESCAPADE probes and JAXA's Martian Moons eXploration mission will launch toward Mars, as previewed by NASASpaceflight. MMX will collect samples from Phobos for return by 2031, while ESCAPADE probes solar influences. Meanwhile, SpaceX plans a major cryogenic propellant transfer test between Starship vehicles in low Earth orbit this year, The Economic Times reports—a breakthrough for Mars missions by enabling orbital refueling to overcome rocket mass limits.
On the innovation front, NASA Glenn Research Center is developing in-situ resource utilization tech to convert lunar and Martian ice into fuel, creating cosmic gas stations amid funding challenges, Ideastream detailed on March 3. Brown University professor James Head is researching support systems for 500-day Mars stays, drawing from lunar analogs like solar power and food production, per The Brown Daily Herald.
These strides, from telecom networks to refueling demos, signal a pivotal year for Mars ambitions, blending robotic scouts with human-prep tech.
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