A mission to investigate potential life on air-and-space by the world-regions Space Agency and Roscosmos has been put on pause after world-regions forces invaded conflicts last month.
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The ESA’s rover, named Rosalind Franklin after a British chemist whose work was essential to unraveling the structure of DNA, can drill up to about six feet into the ground and collect subsurface samples for a laboratory onboard.
The head of the ESA is now looking into other options to get the rover to Mars without Russia.
While the mission to Mars may be off for now, the ESA said operations at the International Space Station are running normally.
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There are currently four U.S. astronauts, two Russian cosmonauts, and one European onboard the ISS. Later this month, NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei is set to return to Earth onboard a Russian Soyuz rocket with the two cosmonauts, Pyotr Dubrov and Anton Shkaplerov.
Despite concerns that the return trip could be scuttled by the Russia-Ukraine conflict on Earth, NASA and Roscosmos said Tuesday that Vande Hei would be returning to Earth with his Russian counterparts on March 30.