Christmas 2003 was bittersweet for Mars scientists. Because one gift they desperately wanted never arrived: The British-built (spacecraft) Beagle 2 was scheduled to land on the Red Planet, radio home the good news and begin a search for life. Instead, mission controllers heard nothing. They finally declared the Beagle 2 lost after months of (silence). Many space scientists thought it crash-landed or broke up in the thin Martian atmosphere.
\But now Beagle 2’s final resting place has been found. New images from NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter revealed the spacecraft in its (intended) landing region, a massive impact basin near the Martian equator.
The two-meter-wide lander is little more than a low-resolution lump of pixels in the images. But investigators gathered enough information to piece together what probably went wrong: the probe’s solar panels seem to have only partially (deployed), throttling Beagle 2’s power and preventing it from phoning home. Without contact with mission control, the probe was doomed to a slow demise before it could perform any science.
Nevertheless, the lander appears intact, and the remains of a parachute and an atmospheric-entry cover lie hundreds of meters away. Beagle 2 may now be (considered) a partial success, delivering the United Kingdom a very late Christmas gift: the nation’s first soft landing on another planet.