Latest efforts to contact a British-led mission to Mars from its orbiting mothership have failed, compounding fears the Beagle 2 probe crashed during a Christmas Day touchdown.
Gloom surrounding the first all-European mission to Mars contrasts with the joy at NASA, whose robot explorer Spirit safely landed on the Red Planet at the weekend and has transmitted high-definition pictures in the last few days.
"We did not get a signal from the surface of Mars but this is not the end of the story - we have more shots to play," the European Space Agency's David Southwood said on Wednesday.
"It is a setback and it makes me feel very sad," he added.
Engineers and scientists at the Beagle HQ in London hung their heads after the announcement.
"We hope we'll get the dog to come back to the kennel," said a defeated-looking Colin Pillinger who heads the project.
"We must play until the final whistle."
Although nothing has been heard from the 34kg (75lb) probe since its attempted landing, scientists say they have not given up and will make further attempts to talk to it.
Project scientists have pinned their hopes on contacting the lander, designed to hunt for evidence of life on Mars, on its orbiting mothership, the Mars Express.
But the Express's first pass just 350 km above the probe's landing site, near the planet's equator, resulted only in a worrying silence.
The Express will pass over the landing site again on January 8, 9 and 10 for about five to eight minutes each time. If those attempts fail it passes again on the 12th and 14th. Pillinger said the absolute last attempt would be made in February.