UPDATE 16 June: MEX Deputy Spacecraft Operations Manager James Godfrey just emailed to report that yesterday’s MSL overflight seems to have gone rather well! “We have received good telemetry from the MEX Melacom radio and we are now in the process of analysing the data to extract the signal from MSL.”

Today, Mars Express established a communication link with NASA’s Curiosity rover (MSL) on the surface of Mars to conduct an important test prior to the arrival of ESA’s ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO), carrying the the ExoMars Entry, Descent and Landing Demonstrator Module (EDM), Schiaparelli, in October.

The test saw Curiosity serve as a stand-in (rove-in?) for Schiaparelli on the surface, transmitting a signal to MEX similar to how Schiaparelli will transmit during landing on 19 October. From orbit above, MEX had its lander communication system (Melacom) – with recently updated software – configured as it will be in October, and the orbiter tested receiving signals from below.

Here’s the timeline of how today’s test went, as programmed; all commands were uploaded in advance and the sequence was executed automatically on board (times in UTC).

2016-06-15 06:22:53.000 – MEX begins to slew to point the radio antenna towards MSL’s position on the surface 2016-06-15 06:40:00.000 – Melacom Switches on 2016-06-15 06:55:00.000 – MSL starts transmitting its beacon 2016-06-15 06:55:00.000 – After a 15-minute warm-up, Melacom starts recording the signal from MSL 2016-06-15 07:05:00.000 – Melacom is powered down and the first part of the recording is complete 2016-06-15 07:10:00.000 – After a 15-minute wait, Melacom is powered back up 2016-06-15 07:14:00.000 – No waiting this time; 4 minutes allowed for start up as Melacom starts its second recording 2016-06-15 07:23:00.000 – MSL stops transmitting 2016-06-15 07:23:00.000 – Melacom is powered down and the second recording is complete 2016-06-15 07:23:10.000 – Test complete; MEX now begins to slew back to Earth; data will be dumped in a few hours

Note: Data were still arriving as we posted this, so no analysis to report yet:

Here’s a brief description of the actual Schiaparelli arrival activity that this test was meant to exercise (see also: A little help from friends):

On 19 October, about 80 minutes before landing, expected at 14:48 GMT (16:48 CEST), Schiaparelli will wake up and a few minutes later begin transmitting a beacon signal (Schiaparelli will have se4parated from the ExoMars/TGO orbiter on 16 October).

Mars Express will already have pointed Melacom’s small antenna to the spot above the planet where Schiaparelli will appear, and will begin recording the beacon signal, ‘slewing’ – rotating – continuously so as to keep its antenna pointed to follow the module’s descent trajectory.

“Recording will continue through touch-down and the first approximately fifteen minutes of surface operation, after which Schiaparelli will be programmed to switch off and Mars Express will stop recording,” says Mars Express Spacecraft Operations Engineer Simon Wood.

The Schiaparelli signal data will be saved on board Mars Express in two segments; the first, larger, segment will record signals from wake up of the module until about 20 minutes before it reaches the Martian atmosphere, while the second, smaller, segment will record the descent through the atmosphere, touch down and the first 15 minutes of surface operations.

“Then, Mars Express will re-orient its main antenna toward Earth and download the second, smaller segment of recorded data, which should contain the first in-situ confirmation from Mars of Schiaparelli’s arrival and landing,” says Simon.

The data will be received via ESA’s Cebreros deep-space ground station, in Spain, by the Mars Express flight control team at ESOC, ESA’s mission control centre in Darmstadt, Germany, and then passed on to the ExoMars mission controllers.

Even more friends

Mars Express won’t be the only ‘set of ears’ listening in to Schiaparelli’s descent that day.

At Mars, NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) will monitor signals from Schiaparelli, but only after its landing, due to MRO’s orbital geometry.

The TGO orbiter, while conducting its own critical orbit entry manoeuvre, will also record Schiaparelli’s descent and landing, but this data can only be downloaded some hours after it has completed orbit entry.

In the following days, Mars Express and MRO – as well as the other NASA Mars orbiters, Odyssey and MAVEN – will each serve as data-relay platforms, overflying Schiaparelli’s landing site in Meridiani Planum once or twice per day, picking up data transmitted from the lander during its nominal two- to four-day surface science mission, and relaying these to Earth.

Mars Express will also support the Schiaparelli mission through remote sensing measurements over the landing site during several weeks prior to the event.