Unpublished conference/Abstract (Scientific congresses and symposiums)
The M-MATISSE mission: Mars Magnetosphere ATmosphere Ionosphere and Space weather SciencE. An ESA Medium class (M7) candidate in Phase-A.  
Sanchez-Cano, Beatriz; Leblanc, François; Andrews, David et al.
2025EPSC-DPS Joint Meeting 2025
Peer reviewed
 

Files


Full Text
EPSC-DPS2025-358-print.pdf
Publisher postprint (227.84 kB) Creative Commons License - Attribution
Download

All documents in ORBi are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Keywords :
M-MATISSE; Mars; mission
Abstract :
[en] The “Mars Magnetosphere ATmosphere Ionosphere and Space-weather SciencE (M-MATISSE)” mission is an ESA Medium class (M7) candidate currently in Phase A study by the European Space Agency (ESA) (Figure 1). M-MATISSE’s main scientific goal is to unravel the complex and dynamic couplings of the Martian Magnetosphere, Ionosphere and Thermosphere (M-I-T coupling) with relation to the Solar Wind (i.e. space weather) and the lower atmosphere, and the processes leading to this coupling, which are highly entangled between several regions of the system (Figure 2). The M-I-T coupling controls the dissipation of incoming energy from the solar wind, and therefore, the evolution of Mars’ atmosphere and climate (including atmospheric escape, auroral processes, and incoming radiation). Moreover, understanding the behaviour of Mars’ M-I-T system and of the chain of processes that control Space Weather and Space Climate at Mars, as well as the radiation environment, is essential for exploration as it leads to accurate Space Weather forecasts and, thus, prevents hazardous situations for spacecraft and humans.Figure 1: The “Mars Magnetosphere ATmosphere Ionosphere and Space-weather SciencE (M-MATISSE)” mission is an ESA Medium class (M7) candidate.Mission goals: The mission has three main goals:Characterising the global dynamics of the M-I-T coupling by unravelling its temporal and spatial variabilities. This will be done with simultaneous observations of the solar wind (energy input) and ionosphere-magnetosphere (energy sink), and also, via investigating the coupling of the mesosphere with the ionosphere and solar energetic particles. Characterising the Radiation environment, by determining how the M-I-T absorbs the energy that reaches the planet and forecasting near-real time planetary Space Weather Characterising the Ionosphere-lower atmosphere coupling, which is a region barely explored but essential for solar energetic particles related phenomena as well as for communications in the HF wavelengths. In addition, M-MATISSE will significantly contribute to understand Mars climate and the lower atmosphere as two remote instruments have dedicated instrumentation to monitor dust, clouds, and get temperature and density profiles from the surface up to about 50 km. Moreover, the heliophysics community will count with a full-package solar wind monitor at Mars’ distances, contributing to understand solar wind and solar transient propagation in the inner Solar System.Figure 2: Mars regions that M-MATISSE will focus to understand the spatial-temporal variability of the M-I-T system and its couplings from the surface to space.Type of Mission: M-MATISSE is one of the current three candidates in competition at ESA at the Medium-size opportunity in ESA's Science Programme from the call in December 2021. From 27 initial responses, ESA down-selected 5 missions in 2022, which went through a Phase 0 study. In that phase, ESA evaluated the expected science that could be achieved with each mission, as well as came up with a preliminary mission design. In November 2023, ESA further down-selected them to three, which are currently in Phase A studies. In this phase, each candidate mission will be studied in detail by ESA, involving European aerospace companies, national institutes, and universities, resulting in a more comprehensive design for each mission. Payload maturation activities are being performed in parallel including breadboarding and test. It is expected that one candidate mission will be chosen by mid-2026.Figure 3: Simulation of the Martian plasma system and the two M-MATISSE spacecraft with their nominal orbits.M-MATISSE mission concept:  M-MATISSE consists of two orbiters with focused, tailored, high-heritage payloads to observe the plasma environment from the surface to space through coordinated simultaneous observations. It will utilize a unique multi-vantage point observational perspective, with the combination of in-situ measurements by both orbiters and remote observations of the lower atmosphere and ionosphere by radio crosstalk between them (Figure 3).The fathership, called Henri, has a periapsis below 270 km and an apoapsis of 3000 km with an inclination of 60°, and is intended to spend most of its time within the Martian plasma system. The daughtership, called Marguerite, also has an inclination of 60°, a periapsis below 270 km and an apoapsis of 10,000 km, and is intended to spend most of its time in the solar wind and/or far tail of Mars (a region barely explored before).M-MATISSE has a nominal mission duration of 1 Martian  a year, and the launch date is identified for July 2037.Consortium: M-MATISSE is the product of a large organized and experienced international consortium in which 16 different space agencies participate. M-MATISSE is a community-led mission, and a legacy concept from pioneer missions, such as Mars Express, Trace Gas Orbiter, MAVEN and experienced teams.Take home message: M-MATISSE has the unique capability to track solar perturbations from the Solar Wind down to the surface, being the first mission fully dedicated to understand planetary space weather at Mars. It will revolutionize our understanding and ability to forecast potential global hazard situations at Mars, an essential precursor to any future robotic & human exploration.Acknowledgments:  We acknowledge the ESA M-MATISSE CDF team who supported the assessment phase until MDR and the ESA study team, who is managing the Phase A/B1 activities (point of contact robert.buchwald@esa.int). The Science Study Team is managed by Olivier Witasse as M-MATISSE study scientist.
Research Center/Unit :
STAR - Space sciences, Technologies and Astrophysics Research - ULiège
Disciplines :
Space science, astronomy & astrophysics
Author, co-author :
Sanchez-Cano, Beatriz 
Leblanc, François
Andrews, David
Ohlsson, Dan
Futaana, Yoshifumi
Plaschke, Ferdinand
De Keyser, Johan
Rothkaehl, Hanna
Pisa, David
Nemec, Frantisek
Henri, Pierre
Štverák, Štěpán
Colin, Fabrice
Shimoyama, Manabu
Vallieres, Xavier
Verscharen, Daniel
Modolo, Ronan
Devoto, Pierre
Coates, Andrew
Andre, Nicolas
D'Amicis, Raffaella
Prech, Lubomir
Nenon, Quentin
Thornhill, Julian
Hampson, Richard
Cheney, Andrew
Jones, Matthew
Narasimha Swamy, Bhargav
Berthomier, Matthieu
Mangano, Valeria
Nemec, Frantisek
Guignan, Gabriel
Milillo, Anna
Mayall, Adam
Thomas, Vincent
Hadid, Lina
Aizawa, Sae
Raines, Jim
Laky, Gunter
Liemohn, Michael
Yokota, Shoichiro
Giono, Gabriel
Roussos, Elias
Fraenz, Markus
Krupp, Norbert
Fische, Henning
Tuschinsky, Adrian
Meyer, Frank
Malik, Hamza
Roders, Olaf
Pätzold, Martin
Andert, Tom
Vorderobermeier, Tobias
Thiemann, Ed
Harra, Louise
Koller, Silvio
Büchel, Valeria
Nakagawa, Hiromu
Harada, Yuki
Terada, Naoki
Deighan, Justin
Schneider, Nick
Lillis, Robert J.
Jain, Sonal
Gérard, Jean-Claude  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département d'astrophysique, géophysique et océanographie (AGO) > Labo de physique atmosphérique et planétaire (LPAP)
Soret, Lauriane  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département d'astrophysique, géophysique et océanographie (AGO) > Labo de physique atmosphérique et planétaire (LPAP)
Yatsu, Yoichi
Garnier, Philippe
Genot, Vincent
Rouzot, Julien
Blagau, Adrian
Ciobanu, Mircea
Comi, Horia
Marghitu, Octav
Kolmasova, Ivana
Holmberg, Mika
Barczynski, Krzysztof
Tellmann, Silvia
Gonzalez Galindo, Francisco
Nakamura, Yuki
More authors (70 more) Less
Language :
English
Title :
The M-MATISSE mission: Mars Magnetosphere ATmosphere Ionosphere and Space weather SciencE. An ESA Medium class (M7) candidate in Phase-A.  
Publication date :
09 July 2025
Event name :
EPSC-DPS Joint Meeting 2025
Event place :
Helsinki, Finland
Event date :
7–12 September 2025
By request :
Yes
Audience :
International
Peer review/Selection committee :
Peer reviewed
References of the abstract :
EPSC-DPS2025-358
Available on ORBi :
since 26 November 2025

Statistics


Number of views
23 (0 by ULiège)
Number of downloads
16 (0 by ULiège)

OpenCitations
 
0
OpenAlex citations
 
0

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBi