The past week has seen an upswing in news from the front lines of Mars exploration, with NASA and private industry both making crucial strides toward unraveling the mysteries of the Red Planet. Listeners, if you’re tracking humanity’s progress in space, the highlights from the last seven days reveal why the Mars race has never been hotter.
Blue Origin, Jeff Bezos’ private spaceflight company, just announced a major step in Martian communications. As reported by Space.com on August 14, Blue Origin revealed its Mars Telecommunications Orbiter, or MTO, designed to create a high-bandwidth relay between Mars and Earth. If all goes according to plan, the spacecraft could launch in 2028. Blue Origin says the MTO will provide continuous, high-rate data transmission for current and future Mars missions—a critical capability as NASA and international partners look to support both robots and, eventually, astronauts on the surface in the next decade.
In launch news, TS2 Space reports that Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket is now officially scheduled to launch NASA’s twin ESCAPADE Mars probes on September 29, 2025. This marks New Glenn’s second flight—its first interplanetary payload and a big test for Blue Origin’s heavy-lift ambitions. The ESCAPADE mission is designed to study how the solar wind interacts with Mars’ magnetosphere, potentially unlocking clues to the planet’s atmospheric loss and history. New Glenn will also attempt to recover its booster at sea, in a move reminiscent of SpaceX’s reusable rocket model.
Over on the Martian surface itself, NASA’s Perseverance rover continues to deliver mesmerizing results. On August 15, ScienceDaily highlighted that Perseverance’s team captured one of the clearest panoramas yet using 96 individual images. From a site dubbed Falbreen, this shot showcases a mysterious rock perched atop a sand ripple, the distinctive boundary between two geological units, and hills as far as 40 miles away. NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory also chimed in, praising the advanced imagery as offering “stunning vistas” that preview what human explorers may one day witness themselves. Perseverance is still methodically sampling and analyzing rocks in Jezero Crater, steadily building the cache for an eventual sample return mission.
Meanwhile, NASA’s Curiosity rover is still rolling along as it enters its 14th year on Mars, according to NASA mission updates published on August 4 and August 11. The rover has been investigating boxwork formations and so-called “peace sign” ridges as the team continues to unravel Mars’ ancient past.
Listeners, thank you for tuning in to this week’s round-up of the very latest on Mars missions. Don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss an update. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai.
Published on 3 weeks, 1 day ago
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