- CONTACT US
- AFS
- Business
- Bussiness
- Car
- Career
- Celebrity
- Digital Products
- Education
- Entertainment
- Fashion
- Film
- Food
- Fun
- Games
- General Health
- Health
- Health Awareness
- Healthy
- Healthy Lifestyle
- History Facts
- Household Appliances
- Internet
- Investment
- Law
- Lifestyle
- Loans&Mortgages
- Luxury Life Style
- movie
- Music
- Nature
- News
- Opinion
- Pet
- Plant
- Politics
- Recommends
- Science
- Self-care
- services
- Smart Phone
- Sports
- Style
- Technology
- tire
- Travel
- US
- World

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA has lost contact with a spacecraft that has orbited Mars for more than a decade.
Maven abruptly stopped communicating to ground stations over the weekend. NASA said this week that it was working fine before it went behind the red planet. When it reappeared, there was only silence.
Launched in 2013, Maven began studying the upper Martian atmosphere and its interaction with the solar wind once reaching the red planet the following year. Scientists ended up blaming the sun for Mars losing most of its atmosphere to space over the eons, turning it from wet and warm to the dry and cold world it is today.
Maven also has served as a communication relay for NASA’s two Mars rovers, Curiosity and Perseverance.
Engineering investigations are underway, according to NASA.
NASA has two other spacecraft around Mars that are still active: Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, launched in 2005, and Mars Odyssey, launched in 2001.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Five held on suspicion of planning attack on German Christmas market - 2
Executed Iranian nuclear scientist confessed to aiding Israel after torture, threats against mother - 3
Jury says Johnson & Johnson owes $40 million to 2 cancer patients who used talcum powders - 4
Elvis Presley's Infamous Pantera Shooting - 5
New peace laureate: Iran's arrest of Mohammadi 'confession of fear'
Giant ‘toothed’ birds flew over Antarctica 40 million to 50 million years ago
How will the universe end?
New method spots signs of Earth's primordial life in ancient rocks
Satellite constellations could obscure most space telescope observations by late 2030s: 'That part of the image will be forever lost'
Solar storms can trigger auroras on Earth. This star’s explosion could destroy a planet’s atmosphere
Bronze Age "City of Seven Ravines" unearthed in central Asia after 3,500 years
How to watch the last supermoon of the year
Astronomers detect black hole blasting winds at incredible speeds
Newly identified species of Tanzanian tree toad leapfrog the tadpole stage and give birth to toadlets













