- 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
How to watch 'A Charlie Brown Christmas' for free this weekend - 2
Dangerously cold tonight into Monday - 3
'Hero' who wrestled gun from Bondi shooter named as Ahmed al Ahmed - 4
Germany's Deutsche Welle broadcaster declared 'undesirable' in Russia - 5
9 African migrants died in freezing temperatures near Morocco-Algeria border
From invasive species tracking to water security – what’s lost with federal funding cuts at US Climate Adaptation Science Centers
Putting pig organs in people is OK in the US, but growing human organs in pigs is not – why is that?
Orcas seen hunting great white sharks to eat their livers in drone footage recorded in Mexico
South Korea launches Earth-observation satellite on homegrown Nuri rocket
Scientists solve the mystery of 'impossible' merger of 'forbidden' black holes
Don't miss Jupiter shining close to the waning gibbous moon on Dec. 7
Historic underwater structure discovered by divers off French coast
James Webb Space Telescope finds strongest evidence yet for atmosphere around rocky exoplanet: 'It's really like a wet lava ball'
Electric discovery on Mars! Scientists find tiny lightning bolts coming from Red Planet dust clouds













