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From the images, it seems that this system did not unfurl fully.
"Without full deployment, there is no way we could have communicated with it as the radio frequency antenna was under the solar panels," explained Prof Mark Sims, Beagle's mission manager from Leicester University.
"The failure cause is pure speculation, but it could have been, and probably was, down to sheer bad luck - a heavy bounce perhaps distorting the structure as clearances on solar panel deployment weren't big; or a punctured and slowly leaking airbag not separating sufficiently from the lander, causing a hang-up in deployment," he told BBC News.
www.bbc.co.uk...
The discovery of Beagle comes less than a year after the death of the probe's principal investigator, Colin Pillinger. The Royal Society scientific institution announced an award in commemoration of Prof Pillinger on Friday.
Sad that it failed however.
originally posted by: gortex
a reply to: eriktheawful
Sad that it failed however.
The important thing in my eyes is the mission succeeded in that Beagle landed on Mars rather than it crashed as had been previously assumed, unfortunately for reasons we don't yet know the lander failed to deploy fully.
For me this is good news and helpful for the prospects of securing funding for a future Beagle3 mission , it's also confirmation that Colin Pillinger who was the driving force behind the mission got it right as the mission was so nearly a complete success.
Beagle's design incorporated a series of deployable "petals", on which were mounted its solar panels.
From the images, it seems that this system did not unfurl fully "Without full deployment, there is no way we could have communicated with it as the radio frequency antenna was under the solar panels," explained Prof Mark Sims, Beagle's mission manager from Leicester University.
isuppose it`s too much to hope that it`s close to where the rover curiosity is so that it could drive over there and take some pics?