‘In a state of no return’: NASA confirms the MAVEN spacecraft is officially defunct following signal loss behind Mars

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An artist’s concept of NASA’s MAVEN spacecraft at Mars. NASA lost contact with MAVEN in Dec. 2025, and determined it to be “unrecoverable” on June 3, 2026.(Image credit: NASA/GSFC)Share this article 0Join the conversationFollow usAdd us as a preferred source on GoogleSubscribe to our newsletter

After 11 years studying Mars from above, NASA’s MAVEN spacecraft is officially dead, the agency announced in a statement on Wednesday (June 3). The culprit: a drained battery, triggered by an as-yet-unknown anomaly.

MAVEN (short for Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution) began orbiting Mars on Sept. 21, 2014, on a mission to study the Red Planet’s mysterious atmosphere. Circling Mars roughly 6.6 times every Earth day, the spacecraft has facilitated countless discoveries over the last decade — including the first direct observations of a multi-million-year process that has been steadily stripping Mars of its atmosphere.

An illustration of water escaping Mars’ atmosphere, based on data collected by MAVEN.

(Image credit: NASA Goddard)

MAVEN’s discoveries

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