Students have until Saturday, November 20, 2021, to register for the competition, which offers three cash prizes to the three winning entries.
The Emirates Mars Mission (EMM) team has launched the fifth cycle of its Explore Mars competition, offering science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) students an opportunity to explore Mars using scientific data from EMMs Science Data Center for the first time.
The competition gives students the chance to analyse the science data gathered by the Hope Probe, working individually or collaborating in teams of up to three people. To enter, students are required to produce an A1 format scientific poster a commonly used presentation of science data used in international science meetings and events. The posters will be judged by a panel and evaluated based on their scientific content and insight, design and presentation.
Three winners will be selected from the entries received, qualifying for prizes of AED 10,000 ($2722.57), 7,000 ($1905.80) and 5,000 ($1361.28) respectively. Students have until Saturday, November 20, 2021, to register for the competition.
Speaking about the competition, Omran Sharaf, Project Director of Emirates Mars Mission at MBRSC, said: This is the first time in the five years we have been holding the Explore Mars competition that we have been able to offer students the chance to analyse live data from our own instruments, so we are particularly excited to see what insights and discoveries they manage to pull together. The EMM Science Data Centre is currently hosting data gathered from Hopes first mission phase, including ground-breaking observations of Mars discrete aurora and our findings of unusually high concentrations of atmospheric oxygen and carbon monoxide.
The Explore Mars Competition is geared towards honing and refining students research skills by exposing them to the EMM Science Data Center (SDC) and the analytical tools required to compare and contrast Hope Probes unique data sets.
Engineer Hessa Al Matrooshi, Emirates Mars Mission Science Lead added: Launching the fifth version of the Explore Mars competition highlights our ongoing commitment to inform, educate and inspire the next generation of talent. After sharing the first batch of data gathered by Hope Probe with the scientific community, we are excited to use this contest as an opportunity to get students excited about using the data to serve as a launchpad to inspire and encourage them to explore careers in space science.
The Emirates Mars Mission is studying the relationship between the upper layer and lower regions of the Martian atmosphere, giving the international science community full access to a holistic view of the Martian atmosphere at different times of the day, through different seasons.
The Hope Probe carries three state-of-the-art instruments: EXI The Emirates eXploration Imager, EMIRS The Emirates Mars InfraRed Spectrometer and EMUS The Emirates Mars Ultraviolet Spectrometer,
Data from these instruments is uploaded every three months to the EMM Science Data Centre and made publicly available to scientists, researchers and enthusiasts globally, without embargo.
The Missions Hope Probe is following its planned 20,000 43,000 km elliptical science orbit, with an inclination to Mars of 25 degrees, giving it a unique ability to complete one orbit of the planet every 55 hours and capture a full planetary data sample every nine days throughout its one Martian year (two Earth year) mission to map Mars atmospheric dynamics.
EMM and the Hope probe are the culmination of a knowledge transfer and development effort started in 2006, which has seen Emirati engineers working with partners around the world to develop the UAEs spacecraft design, engineering and manufacturing capabilities.