The Mars Telecommunications Orbiter (MTO) was a cancelled Mars mission that was originally intended to launch in 2009 and would have established an Interplanetary Internet between Earth and Mars.[1][2] The spacecraft would have arrived in a high orbit above Mars in 2010 and relayed data packets to Earth from a variety of Mars landers, rovers and orbiters for as long as ten years, at an extremely high data rate. Such a dedicated communications satellite was thought to be necessary due to the vast quantity of scientific information to be sent to Earth by landers such as the Mars Science Laboratory.[3]
On July 21, 2005, it was announced that MTO had been canceled due to the need to support other short-term goals, including a Hubble servicing mission, Mars Exploration Rover extended mission operations, launch Mars Science Laboratory in 2009, and to prevent Earth science mission Glory from being cancelled.[4]
MTO would have had two 15 W X-band radio transmitters, and two Ka-band radio transmitters (35 W operational, and 100 W experimental).[1]
Proposed successors
After the cancellation, a broader mission was proposed as the Mars Science and Telecommunications Orbiter.[6] However, this mission was soon criticized as lacking well-defined parameters and objectives.[7] Another mission has since been proposed as the 2013 Mars Science Orbiter.[8]
The communications capability provided by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter and Mars Express science missions has proven substantial, demonstrating that dedicated relay satellites may be unnecessary in the near future. The two newest science orbiters are the MAVEN, which arrived at Mars on September 21, 2014 with an Electratransceiver; and the 2016 European ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter, that also carries an ElectraUHF bandtransceiver.[9] But both follow science orbits not designed for relay communications.
Around 2014, a concern in NASA is that the currently used relay satellite, Mars Odyssey, may fail, resulting in the need to press MAVEN science orbiter into use as the backup telecommunications relay,[10] but the highly elliptical orbit of MAVEN will limit its usefulness as a relay for operating landers on the surface.[11][12]
Optical PAyload for Lasercomm Science – Optical communications test in 2014 between earth and ISSPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets (OPALS)
^Stephen, Clark (July 27, 2014). "NASA considers commercial telecom satellites at Mars". Space Flight Now. Retrieved 2014-09-23. It is due to arrive at Mars in September, but MAVEN's planned orbit is not ideal for collecting and sending rover data.
Missions are ordered by launch date. Sign † indicates failure en route or before intended mission data returned. ‡ indicates use of the planet as a gravity assist en route to another destination.