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I know that ESA is cooperating with Roscosmos on the ExoMars project. But what were the reasons of selecting a Proton launch vehicle instead of Ariane? Is it because Baikonur is a more favourable launch site (than French Guyana)?

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    $\begingroup$ I suspect it reflects more on the way the cost of the mission is divided between the two parties. I see they're using a Proton instead of a Soyuz: esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Science/ExoMars/… $\endgroup$
    – Hobbes
    Mar 14, 2016 at 11:19
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    $\begingroup$ Baikonur is not better than Guyana, the latter being closer to the equator and launches over the ocean (although weather is better at Baikonur). I think it is because the US left the ExoMars cooperation with ESA some years ago, and the US part was to deliver launch vehicles and a rover. Russia was simply chosen as replacement of the parts which the US was supposed to have done, probably because then ESA wouldn't need to increase its budget for participating in the mission (by much). And because Russia maybe wouldn't accept any smaller part. They do know alot about launchers. $\endgroup$
    – LocalFluff
    Mar 14, 2016 at 13:21
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    $\begingroup$ Also, proton is quoted as twice cheaper (and less powerful than Ariane 5). Why fly an expensive rocket when you just need a cheaper one ? It seems unlikely that Baikonur would be a more favorable launch site since Kourou is closer to the equator. $\endgroup$
    – Antzi
    Mar 14, 2016 at 13:22
  • $\begingroup$ @LocalFluff: Arianne can deliver a bigger payload to high orbits. They have about the same max payload capacity (structural durability, fairing size, etc), but Arianne has more delta-V - to reach the same distant destinations of Arianne, Proton-M must make sacrifices in payload mass carried. Or, if they both arrive at LEO with about the same (maximum) payload, Arianne will have a plenty of fuel left. Check their payloads to GTO instead of to LEO. $\endgroup$
    – SF.
    Mar 14, 2016 at 14:28
  • $\begingroup$ @SF I've seen those numbers but don't understand how they add up. I and others have asked about those tons to LEO/GEO/X numbers before, and the answer seems to be that it depends... Ariane 5's fuel left in LEO is included in mass to LEO, which is often stated as similar or higher for Proton. $\endgroup$
    – LocalFluff
    Mar 14, 2016 at 14:42

2 Answers 2

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As @Antzi said in his now-deleted answer, initially ExoMars was to be a collaboration between ESA and NASA, with NASA providing the launches. When NASA left the program, ESA sought a new deal, this time with Roscosmos.

As of 2009, in April 2018, NASA's Atlas rocket would launch the European Space Agency's long-delayed ExoMars rover and a smaller NASA rover (Mars Astrobiology Explorer-Cacher, MAX-C) to look for signs of life on Mars. The rovers were scheduled to land in the same location on the Red Planet in January 2019. Thanks to a highly intelligent navigation systems, the mobile robots would travel for several miles across the Martian landscape. The European spacecraft would use a ground-penetrating radar to locate subsurface features associated with the past presence of water. It would then drill as deep as two meters below the surface to extract samples for in-situ analysis.

By 2011, Russian and European scientists did discuss coordination between ExoMars and Mars-NET project, which at the time was expected to coincide with ExoMars. A joint launch of both spacecraft on a single Russian Proton rocket had been considered, however no agreement was reached. Russian scientists also proposed an infrared spectrometer and particle detectors for installation on the ExoMars rover. Russian-built radioactive heat generators could also be integrated into landers to provide thermal control on the frozen martian surface.

However all plans for the ExoMars mission in 2016, along with the follow-on launch in 2018, ran into trouble by 2011. NASA failed to secure funds for the procurement of the rocket to launch the orbiter and the EDM spacecraft and possibly for the already long-delayed ExoMars rover. As a result, in October 2011, European space officials were quoted in the Western media as saying that Russia had been "invited" into the project in exchange for... providing a heavy-lifting Proton rocket to launch the troubled US-European mission in 2016. According to European space officials, Russians would be "compensated" with the "right" to install their experiments onboard the EDM and ExoMars spacecraft and access the scientific return from the missions.

Despite initial misgivings (Russia had phased out Proton for scientific missions), they agreed after all:

By the Spring of 2012, Russian space officials agreed to provide a pair of Proton rockets to launch both ExoMars missions -- in 2016 and 2018.

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Baikonur is definitely less favorable launch site than Guiana, with highly inclined orbits, but that doesn't play such a big role with interplanetary missions as inclination correction on very high orbits is relatively inexpensive.

But first, there are simple, direct budget concerns: ExoMars doesn't require the large payload capacity of Arianne (and it's difficult to share payload space with commercial missions on an interplanetary launch), and then Proton-M cost per kg to orbit is significantly lower - almost half the price of Ariane 5ES.

And then - considering that Roscosmos provides the launchers, the only costs of ESA are development of the actual payloads. Surely Roscosmos wouldn't be willing to fund an Arianne launch instead...

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