This is all such a shame because, aside from some final tests and adjustments, the ExoMars mission appeared to be ready to go.

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All the flight hardware required for launch was installed onto the spacecraft, while the system’s landing platform, called Kazachok, was also ready to go, with its scientific instruments tested, working, and accounted for, according to the ESA. The Rosalind Franklin rover was also ready for launch atop a Russian Proton rocket, having recently completed thermal and vacuum tests. Once on Mars, this rover will search for signs of life, digging to a depth of two meters (6.6 feet).

That said, pressing questions remained about the system’s two parachutes, which will slow the lander during its descent to the Martian surface. Parachute deployment tests done last year in May and August both failed, placing the mission in jeopardy. Tests done in late 2019 resulted in progress, but a pair of final high-altitude tests for both parachutes had yet to happen. These tests were scheduled to take place in Oregon later this month, which, if successful, would’ve met the April deadline to meet the 2020 launch window. If there’s any silver lining to the postponement, it’s that the parachute component no longer needs to be rushed.

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The ESA also reports that the system’s descent module was still going through tests related to its propulsion system, and the New York Times says engineers are trying to fix issues with its electronics. Both the descent module and the Kazachok lander have yet to complete environmental testing to ensure their components are fit for the journey to the Red Planet, according to the ESA.

The ExoMars mission might or might not have been ready for the 2020 launch window, but now we’ll never know.

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There are other scheduled launches to think about for the coming year, namely NASA’s Mars 2020 Perseverance rover, the United Arab Emirates’s Hope Mars Mission, and China’s Chang’e 5 lunar sample return mission. These missions—as far as we know—are still going to happen. But with covid-19, things are changing by the minute, so we should take nothing for granted.

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This latest postponement is yet another frustrating setback for ExoMars. As you may recall, the previous ExoMars mission in 2016 resulted in the loss of the Schiaparelli lander, which crashed onto the Martian surface due to an apparent computer glitch.