November 6, 2019

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Researcher makes the heart of Mars speak

In 2020 the ExoMars mission will send a platform with the LaRa, a 100% Belgian-made instrument, supervised by UCLouvain researcher Véronique Dehant Credit: UCLouvain
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In 2020 the ExoMars mission will send a platform with the LaRa, a 100% Belgian-made instrument, supervised by UCLouvain researcher Véronique Dehant Credit: UCLouvain

For 20 years, Véronique Dehant, a space scientist at University of Louvain (UCLouvain) and the Royal Observatory of Belgium, has been working on understanding the Earth's core. In a few months, she will be able to complete her research by studying the heart of Mars, thanks to the ExoMars mission. Its purpose is to collect Martian radio science data and analyse the planet's rotation in order to better understand the red planet's innards and thus determine whether life is feasible on Mars. In the end, for Véronique Dehant, "This UCLouvain research is one more brick in the wall of understanding outer space."

A bit of space history

For a planet to be habitable, it needs water on its surface. Previous missions have demonstrated that there was water on Mars and that there is none today. Another essential fact about the red planet: its magnetic field is now extinct (which makes Mars uninhabitable—Earth's magnetic field and atmosphere protect us from radiation and the eroding our atmosphere). To understand this loss of atmosphere, one solution is to study the heart of Mars.

To obtain a magnetic field, movement in the planetary core's fluid part (conductive liquid core) is required. Understanding the nature of Mars's core will determine where the planet is in its evolution and even whether a could one day be recreated—an essential condition for living on the red planet.

Mars platform and robot

In concrete terms, on 25 July 2020 the ExoMars mission, led jointly by the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Russian Space Agency (ROSCOSMOS), will send a platform and a robot to the red planet:

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