Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
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Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter

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Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter

The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) is a spacecraft designed to search for the existence of water on Mars and provide support for missions to Mars, as part of NASA's Mars Exploration Program. It was launched from Cape Canaveral on August 12, 2005, at 11:43 UTC and reached Mars on March 10, 2006, at 21:24 UTC. In November 2006, after six months of aerobraking, it entered its final science orbit and began its primary science phase.

Mission objectives include observing the climate of Mars, investigating geologic forces, providing reconnaissance of future landing sites, and relaying data from surface missions back to Earth. To support these objectives, the MRO carries different scientific instruments, including three cameras, two spectrometers and a subsurface radar. As of July 29, 2023, the MRO has returned over 450 terabits of data, helped choose safe landing sites for NASA's Mars landers, discovered pure water ice in new craters and further evidence that water once flowed on the surface on Mars.

The spacecraft continues to operate at Mars, far beyond its intended design life. Due to its critical role as a high-speed data-relay for ground missions, NASA intends to continue the mission as long as possible, at least through the late 2020s. As of October 31, 2025, the MRO has been active at Mars for 6983 sols, or 19 years, 7 months and 21 days, and is the third longest-lived spacecraft to orbit Mars, after 2001 Mars Odyssey and Mars Express.

After the failures of the Mars Climate Orbiter and the Mars Polar Lander missions in 1999, NASA reorganized and replanned its Mars Exploration Program. In October 2000, NASA announced its reformulated Mars plans, which reduced the number of planned missions and introduced a new theme, "follow the water". The plans included the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), to be launched in 2005.

On October 3, 2001, NASA chose Lockheed Martin as the primary contractor for the spacecraft's fabrication. By the end of 2001 all of the mission's instruments were selected. There were no major setbacks during the MRO's construction, and the spacecraft arrived at John F. Kennedy Space Center on April 30, 2005, for launch preparations.

MRO has both scientific and "mission support" objectives which were carried out during the mission's phases. The Primary Science Phase lasted until November 2008, at which time NASA declared the mission a success. The Extended Science Phase, lasting from 2008 to 2010, was initially planned to support the Phoenix lander and the Mars Science Laboratory, but they were uncontactable and delayed respectively, freeing up the MRO to further study Mars.After 2010, the mission consisted of Extended Mission (EM) phases, each lasting two years up to EM4, and three years from then on. As of 2024, the MRO is on its 6th extended mission.

The formal science objectives of MRO are to observe the present climate, particularly its atmospheric circulation and seasonal variations; search for signs of water, both past and present, and understand how it altered the planet's surface; map and characterize the geological forces that shaped the surface.

To support other missions to Mars, the MRO also has mission support objectives. They are to provide data relay services from ground missions back to Earth, characterize the safety and feasibility of potential future landing sites and Mars rover traverses, and capture data from the entry, descent and landing phase of rovers.

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