NASA

Prof. Eric Evans to serve on NASA’s Mars Sample Return Strategy Review Team

NASA announced Wednesday a new strategy review team will assess potential architecture adjustments for the agency’s Mars Sample Return Program, which aims to bring back scientifically selected samples from Mars, and is a key step in NASA’s quest to better understand our solar system and help answer whether we are alone in the universe.

Earlier this year, the agency commissioned design studies from the NASA community and eight selected industry teams on how to return Martian samples to Earth in the 2030s while lowering the cost, risk, and mission complexity. The new strategy review team will assess 11 studies conducted by industry, a team across NASA centers, the agency’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, and the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory. The team will recommend to NASA a primary architecture for the campaign, including associated cost and schedule estimates.

“Mars Sample Return will require a diversity of opinions and ideas to do something we’ve never done before: launch a rocket off another planet and safely return samples to Earth from more than 33 million miles away,” said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. “It is critical that Mars Sample Return is done in a cost-effective and efficient way, and we look forward to learning the recommendations from the strategy review team to achieve our goals for the benefit of humanity.”

Returning samples from Mars has been a major long-term goal of international planetary exploration for more than three decades, and the Mars Sample Return Program is jointly planned with ESA (European Space Agency). NASA’s Perseverance rover is collecting compelling science samples that will help scientists understand the geological history of Mars, the evolution of its climate, and potential hazards for future human explorers. Retrieval of the samples also will help NASA’s search for signs of ancient life.

The team’s report is anticipated by the end of 2024 and will examine options for a complete mission design, which may be a composite of multiple studied design elements. The team will not recommend specific acquisition strategies or partners. The strategy review team has been chartered under a task to the Cornell Technical Services contract. The team may request input from a NASA analysis team that consists of government employees and expert consultants. The analysis team also will provide programmatic input such as a cost and schedule assessment of the architecture recommended by the strategy review team.

The Mars Sample Return Strategy Review Team is led by Maria Zuber, E. A. Griswold professor of Geophysics and presidential advisor for science and technology policy, MIT, and includes the following members:
Greg Robinson, former program director, James Webb Space Telescope
Lisa Pratt, former planetary protection officer, NASA
Steve Battel, president, Battel Engineering; Professor of Practice, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Phil Christensen, regents professor, School of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University, Tempe
Eric Evans, director emeritus and fellow, MIT Lincoln Lab and Professor of the Practice, MIT Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Jack Mustard, professor of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Science, Brown University