The ESA's ExoMars mission, which aims to search for trace signs of life on the red planet, reached Mars' orbit on Wednesday following a seven-month journey. After separating itself from its partner ship, the Trace Gas Orbiter, Schiaperelli began transmitting data about the planet's electric fields as it made its way through the atmosphere. The ESA initially couldn't confirm if the probe had landed successfully, and later said that it lost contact right before its expected landing.

Jan Woerner, the ESA's director general, still considers the mission an overall success, despite losing contact with the probe. "This means we will obtain information from a close analysis of the data that Schiaparelli was built for, notably on the performance of elements such as the heat shield, parachute, radar, thrusters and so on," he wrote on his blog. "This information can subsequently be used to improve the design of the 2020 Exomars mission, since in that mission the survival of the descent module will be of real scientific relevance."