SYLLABUS
GS-3:Awareness in the field of space.

Context: Recently, the New Glenn orbital launch vehicle successfully completed its second mission, deploying NASA’s Escape and Plasma Acceleration and Dynamics Explorers (ESCAPADE) twin-spacecraft into the designated loiter orbit.

More on the News

  • Blue Origin (American space company) launched its New Glenn heavy-lift rocket from Cape Canaveral, carrying NASA’s twin EscaPADE Mars spacecraft.
  • The mission marked the rocket’s second flight and its first operational mission for a paying customer.
  • The mission represents New Glenn’s first full success in both satellite deployment and booster recovery.
    • The booster recovery demonstrated Blue Origin’s reusable launch capability for the first time.
  • On its first flight in January 2025, New Glenn reached orbit but did not succeed in landing the first stage on the recovery platform.

Key Highlights of NASA’s Mission

  • The EscaPADE spacecraft will travel for a year near Earth before using a gravity assist to begin its journey to Mars in 2026.
    • The two orbiters will reach Mars in 2027 and begin an 11-month study of its upper atmosphere and magnetic interactions.
  • The mission will investigate how the solar wind interacts with the Martian environment and contributes to atmospheric loss.
    • The mission will also provide insights about Martian space weather and help NASA better understand the conditions astronauts will face when they reach Mars.
  • The study aims to improve scientific understanding of how Mars evolved from a wet planet to a dry one.
  • The twin EscaPADE spacecraft will provide synchronized observations of Mars for the first time.
  • In addition, ESCAPADE will provide more information about Mars’ ionosphere — a part of the upper atmosphere that future astronauts will rely on to send radio and navigation signals around the planet.

Significance of the Project

  • Mars Exploration: ESCAPADE is one of the first missions to use dual, synchronized orbiters to study interactions between a planet and the solar wind, improving 3D modelling of Martian atmospheric loss.
  • Support for Future Mars Missions: Data from ESCAPADE will support mission design for MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) follow-up missions and help refine long-term Mars habitability and atmospheric evolution models.
  • Enabling Human Exploration of Mars: The twin Mars orbiters will generate crucial scientific insights that support future human missions to Mars.
UPSC Mains Practice QuestionThe New Glenn NG-2 mission marks an important milestone in the evolution of commercial heavy-lift launch systems. Discuss how such private-sector capabilities can influence the future of interplanetary exploration, cost efficiency, and strategic space partnerships. 

Strengthening Commercial Participation in Deep-Space Exploration: The mission strengthens the role of commercial companies in NASA’s planetary and lunar exploration programs.

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