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European Space Agency cuts ties with Russia on Mars rover mission

This Feb. 10, 2021 image taken by the United Arab Emirates' "Amal," or "Hope," probe released Sunday, Feb. 14, 2021, shows Mars. (Mohammed bin Rashid Space Center/UAE Space Agency, via AP) This Feb. 10, 2021 image taken by the United Arab Emirates' "Amal," or "Hope," probe released Sunday, Feb. 14, 2021, shows Mars. (Mohammed bin Rashid Space Center/UAE Space Agency, via AP)
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The European Space Agency terminated its cooperation with Russia to launch Europe's first planetary rover, the agency's chief said Tuesday.

Roscosmos, the Russian space agency, and ESA were collaborating on a mission involving the European ExoMars Rover, designed to look for signs of life on Mars.

The rover's September 2022 launch was initially , just weeks after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Now, the ESA Council has officially cut ties with Roscosmos on this joint project as a result of the war in Ukraine and ongoing sanctions, ESA's Director General Josef Aschbacher wrote Tuesday .

There will be more details shared about the future of the mission on July 20, he said.

The ESA has been considering working more closely with NASA moving forward since it became clear the agency needed "to sever" its ties with Russia, .

"Geopolitically, it is clear that we need to sever our ties with Russia, and this decision has been made by the member states," Aschbacher . "So yes, it's really unfortunate for all the science and technology and the engineers who have been working on this for four decades. But there is no other choice to make."

The rover was originally scheduled to launch in July 2020, but the pandemic pushed back the launch window.

ExoMars is also known as Rosalind Franklin, a revered scientist who aided in the decoding of DNA's molecular structure, .

Part of the rover's mission includes drilling holes up to 6.6 feet (2 metres) to collect samples for onboard analysis. ExoMars is expected to travel and is capable of moving between (50 and 100 metres) per Martian day, which is just under an hour longer than Earth's 24 hours, .

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