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NASA declares Mars Maven probe dead after communication loss

Created at 3 Jun · 3:38 PM12 sources↑ Market-relevant6 events
IN SHORT

NASA has declared its Mars Maven mission concluded after the orbiter became unreachable following a maneuver behind Mars on December 6, 2025. The spacecraft began tumbling and communication was never reestablished, ending an 11-year mission that exceeded its planned duration by a decade.

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Key Numbers

$582 millionMAVEN orbiter cost
2013Mars Maven spacecraft launch year
11 yearsduration of Maven's mission around Mars
December 6, 2025date of the incident behind Mars
20 to 30 minutesnormal communication loss duration behind Mars
10 yearsmission duration beyond original plan
8 percentrelay sessions handled by Maven
18 percenttotal data delivered by Maven
50 to 100 yearsexpected time before Maven falls into Mars' atmosphere
2030sdecade for new Mars Telecommunications Network

Who's Involved

NASA
U.S. space agency that confirmed the end of the Maven mission
Mike Moreau
Project manager for the Maven mission at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
Shannon Curry
Principal investigator for Maven, based at the University of Colorado Boulder
Perseverance rover
Mars rover that captured the first visible-light aurora from the surface with Maven's help
Mars Odyssey
NASA orbiter adjusting operations to compensate for Maven's lost relay capacity
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
NASA orbiter adjusting operations to compensate for Maven's lost relay capacity
NASA declares Mars Maven probe dead after communication loss

↳ Why This Matters

The loss of the Maven orbiter impacts NASA's ability to relay data from Mars surface missions and understand Martian atmospheric dynamics, requiring adjustments to ongoing operations and future mission planning.

Key facts

  • NASA declared the Mars Maven mission concluded.
  • The spacecraft became unreachable after passing behind Mars on December 6, 2025.
  • Maven began rapidly tumbling upon reemerging from behind Mars.
  • Communication was never reestablished after the incident.
  • The mission operated for over 11 years, exceeding its planned duration by 10 years.

NASA announced on June 3 that its Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (Maven) mission has concluded after the orbiter became unreachable. The spacecraft, launched in 2013, was operating normally before it passed behind Mars on December 6, 2025. Upon reemerging, data indicated Maven began rapidly tumbling, and mission control never regained its signal, losing contact for longer than the usual 20-30 minutes. An anomaly review board convened in February determined that the erratic rotation, combined with dwindling battery power, made recovery impossible. Officials delivered a eulogy for the mission, which operated for over 11 years, exceeding its planned duration by 10 years. Maven's scientific contributions include understanding atmospheric escape, its surge during solar storms, and the impact of dust storms on water loss. It also played a crucial role as a communications relay for surface missions like Curiosity and Perseverance, despite handling only 8% of relay sessions but delivering 18% of the data. The orbiter will remain in orbit for an estimated 50 to 100 years before falling into Mars' atmosphere. Other orbiters and a planned Mars Telecommunications Network will compensate for its lost relay capacity.

Frequently asked questions

The Mars Maven spacecraft launched in 2013.

The spacecraft began rapidly tumbling after passing behind Mars and mission control never regained its signal, leading NASA to declare the mission concluded.

NASA confirmed the conclusion of the Mars Maven spacecraft mission.

The MAVEN orbiter cost $582 million.

Maven showed that atmospheric escape from Mars surges during solar storms and that planet-wide dust storms boost water loss to space.

What Happens Next

01NASA will continue its investigation into the root cause of the incident.
02A final report on the Maven incident is expected later in the year.
03NASA plans to establish a new Mars Telecommunications Network in the 2030s.

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Cadence

How It Developed

4 Jun · 1:40 AM
A former astronaut discussed the conclusion of NASA's Maven mission and its farewell.
Yahoo News | Top Stories via PiQSuite
4 Jun · 1:03 AM
NASA confirmed the end of the MAVEN mission after the orbiter went silent in December 2025, with the final report expected later this year.
The Hill via PiQSuite
3 Jun · 9:26 PM
NASA gives up on lost Mars orbiter
CBS News via PiQSuite
3 Jun · 9:26 PM
NASA reluctantly declared the $582 million MAVEN mission over, citing the orbiter's unrecoverable state after a December 2025 incident.
CBS News via PiQSuite
3 Jun · 5:25 PM
NASA declared the Mars Maven mission concluded after the spacecraft went silent over six months ago.
New York Post via PiQSuite
3 Jun · 3:28 PM
NASA confirmed Wednesday that the Mars Maven spacecraft mission, launched in 2013, has concluded after ceasing communications.
The Independent | News via PiQSuite

Sources

T1
NASA's Mars Maven spacecraft declared dead after mysteriously ceasing communicationsm.piqsuite.com
T1
NASA's Maven spacecraft declared dead after mysteriously ceasing communicationsm.piqsuite.com
T1
NASA declares its Mars Maven spacecraft dead after 6 months of silencem.piqsuite.com
T1
NASA declares probe DEAD after it tracked mysterious visitor in our solar systemm.piqsuite.com
T1
NASA gives up on lost Mars orbiterm.piqsuite.com
T1
A NASA orbiter around Mars suffered an abrupt demisem.piqsuite.com
T1
NASA reluctantly gives up on lost orbiter: "Best Mars mission ever"m.piqsuite.com
T1
NASA ends MAVEN mission after Mars orbiter goes silentm.piqsuite.com
T1
NASA declares its Mars Maven spacecraft dead after six months of silencem.piqsuite.com
T1
Former astronaut talks about NASA saying goodbye to Maven missionm.piqsuite.com
T1
"Unrecoverable State": NASA Declares Mars Mission Over After Long Researchm.piqsuite.com
T1
NASA Just Delivered the Mars Orbiter Update Nobody Wanted to Hearm.piqsuite.com

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