Fears grow for European Schiaparelli Mars lander
There are growing fears a European probe that attempted to land on Mars on Wednesday has been lost.
Tracking of the Schiaparelli robot's radio signals was dropped less than a minute before it was expected to touch down on the Red Planet's surface.
Satellites at Mars have attempted to shed light on the probe's status, so far without success.
One American satellite even called out to Schiaparelli to try to get it to respond.
The fear will be that the robot has crashed and been destroyed. The European Space Agency, however, is a long way from formally calling that outcome.
Second loss for them?Seems the 'chute was ditched too soon, so another multi-million-euro mess on Mars.
They should just put loads or organisms and plant materia and stuff on these things. Then by the time the humans land they will have suppliesSeems the 'chute was ditched too soon, so another multi-million-euro mess on Mars.
They should just put loads or organisms and plant materia and stuff on these things. Then by the time the humans land they will have supplies

Am just surprised that they don't send people to orbit Mars and come back. Surely that should be the first step in the process.
So, manned trip to Mars with packages.
Drop off packages, using human intelligence to deploy them in case override or modifications required.
Slingshot back to earth, not forgetting to wave at next batch of astronauts while on the way back.
Cheaper, safer and easier to send probes (for now).
Also how do you expect humans to override or modify a probe on the martian surface whilst in orbit? Might as well do it from Earth.
A prelim report from ESA says the Schiaparelli lander probably pranged because an onboard computer was overwhelmed by data saturation.
"As Schiaparelli descended under its parachute, its radar Doppler altimeter functioned correctly and the measurements were included in the guidance, navigation and control system. However, saturation – maximum measurement – of the Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) had occurred shortly after the parachute deployment. The IMU measures the rotation rates of the vehicle. Its output was generally as predicted except for this event, which persisted for about one second – longer than would be expected.
When merged into the navigation system, the erroneous information generated an estimated altitude that was negative – that is, below ground level. This in turn successively triggered a premature release of the parachute and the backshell, a brief firing of the braking thrusters and finally activation of the on-ground systems as if Schiaparelli had already landed. In reality, the vehicle was still at an altitude of around 3.7 km.
This behaviour has been clearly reproduced in computer simulations of the control system’s response to the erroneous information."
More here.
I think it's aliens personally. But nobody would believe meI would think for missions of this kind defensive coding is in order. It reacted to a below ground level reading. Fail.