Dr. Elena Ramirez

UAE Extends Emirates Mars Mission to 2028, Boosting Peer-Reviewed Publications

UAE's Hope Probe Extension Fuels Research Surge in Higher Education

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Announcement of the Emirates Mars Mission Extension

The United Arab Emirates (UAE) Space Agency has officially extended the Emirates Mars Mission (EMM), also known as the Hope Probe mission, until 2028. This decision, announced on February 17, 2026, during a press conference in Dubai, marks a significant milestone for the Arab world's first interplanetary exploration effort. 10 11 Originally launched in July 2020 aboard a Japanese H-IIB rocket and entering Mars orbit on February 9, 2021, the Hope Probe was designed for a primary mission duration of one Martian year, equivalent to about two Earth years. Its exceptional performance—exceeding scientific goals and maintaining operational health—has justified this three-year extension, allowing for continued data collection and analysis.

Dr. Ahmad Belhoul Al Falasi, Chairman of the UAE Space Agency, highlighted the probe's 'transformational' impact, noting that it has already delivered over 10 terabytes of data across 16 batches, shared with more than 200 global research institutions. This extension aims to maximize scientific returns and provide operational experience for future deep-space missions, such as the UAE's planned Emirates Mission to the Asteroid Belt. 58

Background and Objectives of the Hope Probe

The Hope Probe, or Al-Amal (Arabic for 'Hope'), represents a landmark in UAE's ambitious space program, initiated under the vision of His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum. Developed primarily by the Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre (MBRSC) in collaboration with international partners like the University of Colorado Boulder's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP), the spacecraft carries three key instruments: the Emirates Mars Ultraviolet Spectrometer (EMUS), the Emirates Mars InfraRed Spectrometer (EMIRS), and the Emirates Exploration Imager (EXI).

These instruments enable global-scale observations of Mars' atmosphere over a full Martian year, addressing core scientific questions: Why is Mars losing hydrogen and oxygen to space? What drives its weather escape? And how do lower and upper atmospheric dynamics connect? By orbiting in a unique 20,000 by 43,000 km elliptical path with a 25-hour period, Hope provides daily snapshots impossible from shorter-orbit missions like NASA's MAVEN or Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. 70

This mission not only showcases UAE's technological prowess—making it the first Arab nation and fifth globally to orbit Mars successfully—but also invests heavily in human capital. Over 130 Emirati engineers and scientists, many trained via PhD programs abroad sponsored by MBRSC, contributed to its development, fostering a new generation of space researchers now integrated into UAE universities. 69

Key Scientific Achievements to Date

Since entering orbit, the Hope Probe has revolutionized our understanding of Mars. Notable discoveries include unprecedented views of Martian auroras—diffuse proton auroras invisible in visible light but captured in UV by EMUS—revealing how solar wind interacts with the planet's hydrogen corona. EXI has tracked dust storms and cloud formations, while EMIRS imaged nighttime clouds for the first time in August 2025, showing their evolution from water-ice to CO2-ice dominated structures. 86

  • Close flybys of Deimos, Mars' smaller moon, providing high-resolution images and orbital data.
  • Capture of interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS in October 2025, a rare observation of an extrasolar object from Mars orbit. 58
  • 10+ terabytes of data exceeding initial 1 TB goal by tenfold, aiding studies on biosignature gases like methane that hint at past life potential.

These findings have filled critical gaps in planetary science, with data publicly available via NASA's Planetary Data System, enabling collaborative research worldwide.

Artist rendering of UAE Hope Probe orbiting Mars capturing atmospheric data

Boost in Peer-Reviewed Publications

One of the mission's standout legacies is its contribution to scientific literature, with over 35 peer-reviewed papers published in top journals like Space Science Reviews. Early publications focused on instrument descriptions and mission overviews, such as 'The Emirates Mars Mission' (2022) by H.E.S. Amiri et al., and 'Emirates Mars Mission Characterization of Mars Atmosphere Dynamics' (2021). 70

Recent works leverage operational data: NYU Abu Dhabi's 2023 Mars map and atlas from EXI imagery, and 2025 papers on nighttime clouds using EMIRS. UAE researchers, including those from Khalifa University whose PhD work on atmospheric composition was accepted by the EMM team in 2023, are increasingly lead authors, signaling a surge in high-impact outputs. 100 110

The extension promises dozens more papers, as additional data batches enable longitudinal studies on seasonal changes, directly boosting UAE's global research rankings. For context, UAE universities like Khalifa and UAE University (via NSSTC) have seen space-related citations rise, enhancing their QS and Scopus profiles.Explore EMM publications

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Photo by Laurenz Heymann on Unsplash

Role of UAE Higher Education Institutions

UAE universities play a pivotal role in the EMM ecosystem. Khalifa University's Space Technology and Innovation Center (SIT) trains students in satellite tech, with PhD research integrated into mission science. NYU Abu Dhabi's Center for Astrophysics and Space Science leads Hope data analysis, producing Arabic-language Mars atlases to inspire local students. 113

United Arab Emirates University (UAEU)'s National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) conducts Mars research, leveraging Hope data for planetary simulations. These institutions benefit from MBRSC scholarships sending Emiratis to top global PhD programs—over 100 returnees now drive research at home, publishing in peer-reviewed venues and mentoring the next cohort.

This human investment translates to tangible outputs: Emirati-led papers on Mars habitability and atmospheric escape, positioning UAE as a research hub. Aspiring academics can find opportunities via research jobs or higher ed jobs in UAE space sectors.

Future Scientific Goals with the Extension

Extended to 2028, Hope will observe multiple Martian seasons, probing elusive phenomena like global dust storms' upper-atmosphere links and hydrogen loss rates. Step-by-step, this involves: 1) Continued EXI imaging for weather tracking; 2) EMUS UV spectroscopy for aurora and escape monitoring; 3) EMIRS IR mapping for temperature/cloud profiles.

Expected outcomes include refined climate models predicting Mars' water history, vital for future human exploration. This data will fuel more peer-reviewed studies, with UAE universities poised to lead analyses on regional contexts like dust-climate feedbacks relevant to arid Earth environments.

Global Collaborations and Data Sharing

EMM's open data policy—16 batches on PDS—fosters partnerships with NASA, ESA, JAXA. Over 200 institutions use it, co-authoring papers. UAE benefits from tech transfer, while contributing unique orbital views complementing rovers like Perseverance.

  • Joint NYUAD-LASP cloud studies.
  • Khalifa-MBRSC atmospheric modeling.
  • International workshops at UAEU NSSTC.

Such ties elevate UAE higher ed globally; researchers can access higher ed career advice for international collabs.

UAE Space Agency EMM page

Implications for UAE Research Ecosystem

The extension supercharges UAE's research output, with Scopus-indexed papers from EMM pushing university rankings. It addresses challenges like talent retention by creating UAE academic jobs in space science. Economically, space sector contributes AED 30B+ GDP, with publications driving innovation in AI-satellite tech.

Cultural impact: Inspires youth via outreach, with 1M+ students engaged. Future outlook: More missions mean sustained pub growth, positioning UAE unis as leaders.

a sign that says the space on a wall

Photo by Icarus Chu on Unsplash

Career Opportunities in UAE Space Research

For students and profs, EMM opens doors: Postdocs at Khalifa analyzing Hope data, faculty roles at NYUAD in astrophysics. Check university jobs, rate my professor for mentors. Actionable: Pursue space PhDs, contribute to asteroid mission—skills in demand amid UAE's 2031 centennial goals.

UAE researchers analyzing Hope Probe data at university lab

Conclusion: A Bright Future for UAE Space Science

Extending the Emirates Mars Mission to 2028 cements UAE's space leadership, promising a publication boom that elevates higher ed. With trained talent, open data, and visionary policy, expect transformative insights—and careers. Explore higher ed jobs, career advice, professor reviews, or post a job to join this orbit.

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Dr. Elena Ramirez

Contributing writer for AcademicJobs, specializing in higher education trends, faculty development, and academic career guidance. Passionate about advancing excellence in teaching and research.

Frequently Asked Questions

🪐What is the Emirates Mars Mission?

The Emirates Mars Mission (EMM), or Hope Probe, is UAE's first interplanetary spacecraft orbiting Mars since 2021 to study its atmosphere. Research jobs

🚀Why extend to 2028?

Due to exceptional performance, >10TB data, 35+ papers. Maximizes science for future missions.

🌌What discoveries so far?

Auroras, Deimos flybys, nighttime clouds, comet images. Fills climate gaps.86

📚How many peer-reviewed papers?

>35 in journals like Space Science Reviews. UAE researchers lead recent ones.

🎓UAE universities' role?

Khalifa, NYUAD, UAEU analyze data, train PhDs. Boosts rankings.

🔭Future science goals?

Seasonal dynamics, escape processes. More data batches.

🌍Global collaborations?

Data shared with 200+ institutions, NASA partners.

💼Career impacts?

Jobs in space research at UAE unis. See higher ed jobs.

⚗️Instruments on Hope Probe?

EMUS (UV), EMIRS (IR), EXI (visible imager). Unique orbit.

📊How to access data?

Via NASA's PDS. UAE portals too. Ideal for researchers.

🌠UAE space ambitions?

Asteroid mission next, 2117 Mars city. Higher ed key.

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