Europe's Mars lander crashed after misjudging altitude
Sensor failure told the lander it was below ground level, instead of 3.7 km above the surface of Mars
Europe's Schiaparelli Mars lander crashed last month after a sensor failure in its navigation system caused it to cast away its parachute and turn off braking thrusters more than 3.7 kilometres above the surface of the planet, a report released on Wednesday said.
The error stemmed from a momentary glitch in a device that measured how fast the spacecraft was spinning, the report by the European Space Agency said. The glitch caused the lander to respond as if it had already landed, it said.
"When merged into the navigation system, the erroneous information generated an estimated altitude that was negative — that is, below ground level. This in turn successively triggered a premature release of the parachute ... and a brief firing of the braking thrusters," ESA said of its Oct. 19 attempt to land the Schiaparelli spacecraft on Mars.
The spacecraft activated its ground systems, even though it was still about 3.7 kilometres off the surface, the ESA said. It then crashed to the ground at a speed of 540 km/h, instead of gliding gently onto the surface of the planet, the report said.
Test run for future rover
The crash of Schiaparelli onto the surface of Mars abruptly ended its mission to demonstrate a landing system and to measure wind speed and direction from the planet's surface.
The $386-million mission was a test-run for a future rover meant to seek out evidence of life, past or present, but it fell silent seconds before its scheduled touchdown Oct. 19.
The prime contractor for the spacecraft is Italy's Thales Alenia Space, a joint venture of Thales SA and Leonardo Finmeccanica SpA. A full report on the accident is expected in early 2017, ESA said.
ESA, which is based in Paris and has 22 member states, said the flight still provided information that will be key to landing a rover vehicle on Mars in 2021 that is designed to look for life past and present.
"We will have learned much from Schiaparelli," David Parker, who oversees space exploration programs for ESA, said in a statement.
with files from CBC News