Carefully Choreographed NASA/ESA Mission Could Return Martian Soil Samples to Earth
Life on Mars? A three-phase, $10 billion mission to retrieve soil and rock samples from the Red Planet and bring them back to Earth could finally settle one of astronomy's most pressing questions. We've landed the robots, puttered about on the planet's surface, and, at long last, found the water. Now, NASA is getting back to basics on Mars with a plan to once again search for signs of life on the Red Planet, a focus that's been on the back burner since the 1976 Viking missions. But this time, NASA doesn't want to analyze Mars from Mars. This time the space agency wants to bring samples back home, and has a cleverly orchestrated scheme to do it. NASA thinks the acquisition and return of Martian rock and soil samples is completely doable, but it's going to be a costly three-phase process, probably with a price tag totaling some $10 billion....