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Mars Rover Remains In 'Critical' Condition...
Spaceflight Now.com ^ | 01/23/2004 | William Harwood

Posted on 01/23/2004 4:35:20 PM PST by Hiwayman

The crippled Spirit rover remains in critical condition on the surface of Mars, engineers said today, the victim of ongoing electronic seizures that have caused its central computer to reboot itself more than 60 times over the past two days.

Engineers successfully coaxed the rover to beam back limited engineering data during two brief communications sessions and they were relieved to discover the spacecraft's power system was providing the necessary life support. But Spirit's state of mind was clearly - and unusually - different in both sessions, ruling out any simple explanations for what might have gone wrong.

"We have a serious problem," said project manager Pete Theisinger. "The fact that we've got a vehicle that we believe is stable for an extensive period of time will give us time to work that problem. We can command it to talk to us and even though we get perhaps limited information, we do get good information and that helps us work through the problem.

"I expect that we will get functionality back out of this rover. I think the chances that it will be perfect again, I would think, are not good. The chances that it will not work at all, I think are also low. I think we're somewhere in that broad middle and we need to understand the problem to find out exactly where we are."

Spirit went on the blink Wednesday as it was carrying out a procedure to calibrate drive motors used by its thermal emission spectrometer. Prior to that moment, everything was operating normally. But some event, possibly a hardware failure of some sort, threw the rover's electronic brain for a loop. Since then, the spacecraft has been in a state of limbo, responding in unusual fashion to anxious flight controllers.

"This morning, we sent an early beep to the spacecraft and did not get a response," Theisinger said. "As we were preparing to send a second, the spacecraft talked to us. We got very fractional frames and then moved very quickly to ask it to speak to us for 30 minutes at 120 bits per second. We got 20 minutes of transmission in that occasion, which was a single frame of engineering data repeated.

"Then we repeated that full sequence of events and we got about 15 minutes of engineering data at 120 bits per second where the frames were updated for 15 minutes and then for the second 15 minutes we had nothing but fill data."

He said Spirit "has been in a processor reset loop of some type, mostly since Wednesday, we believe, where the processor wakes up, loads the flight software, uncovers a condition that would cause it to reset. But the processor doesn't do that immediately. It waits for a period of time - at the beginning of the day it waits for 15 minutes twice and then for the rest of the day it waits for an hour - and then it resets and comes back up."

Complicating the work to track down the problem, "the indications we have on two occasions is that the thing that causes the reset is not always perceived to be the same," Theisinger said. "We are confused by that, but that's the facts as we presume them to be right now."

The reset sequence, similar to repeatedly unplugging one's personal computer and forcing it to restart, began Wednesday morning on Mars when a calibration of the spectrometer motors ended prematurely. An anomaly team has been formed to study the telemetry and to decide what readings to request from Spirit to help narrow down the range of possible failures.

"I think we should expect that we will not be restoring functionality to Spirit for a significant period of time," Theisinger said, "I think many days, perhaps a couple of weeks, even in the best of circumstances, from what we see today."

In the meantime, he said, Spirit remains in "critical" condition.

"We do not know to what extent we can restore functionality to the system because we don't know what's broke," Theisinger said. "We don't know what started this chain of events and I think, personally, that it's a sequence of things, and we don't know, therefore, the consequences of that. I think its difficult at this very preliminary stage to assume we did not have some type of hardware event that caused this to start and therefore, we don't know to what extent we can work around that hardware event and to what extent we can get the software to ignore that hardware event if that's what we eventually have to do.

"We've got a long way to go here with the patient in intensive care. But we have been able to establish that we can command it, and we have been able to establish that it can give us information and we have been able to establish that the power system is good and we're thermally OK and those are all very, very important pieces of information.

"We are a long, long way from being done here, but we do have serious problems and our ability to eventually work around them is unknown. Do not expect a big sea change in either knowledge or theory in the next several days. This is a very complex problem."

Amid the troubleshooting, Spirit's twin - the Opportunity rover - remains on track to land early Sunday morning East Coast time on Meridiani Planum, a region on the other side of Mars where deposits of minerals that form in the presence of water have been detected. Theisinger said engineers do not believe Spirit's problem poses any generic risk to Opportunity, but he said the flight control team would be much more cautious in its daily operations to minimize the chances of a similar problem.

"It is likely, depending upon what happens in the next 48 to 72 hours, that we may not continue the Opportunity impact-to-egress with the same pace and dispatch that we did on Spirit," he said. "It depends on if we can get Opportunity to a defined, sustainable state on the ground and we can continue to make progress (with) Spirit. We will likely do that and try and continue to make progress on Spirit to get it back to some level of functionality. That's a decision the project will make in consultation with management as we take the temperature of this thing over the next couple of days."

So far, the only change for planned for Opportunity's descent is a decision to deploy its braking parachute at a slightly higher altitude than Spirit's to provide more of a safety margin.

In other developments, engineers today presented a dramatic animation of Spirit's landing based on actual telemetry from the spacecraft, showing how a sudden gust of wind forced small side-pointing rockets to fire at the last second to prevent the lander from slamming down at more than 50 mph.

The telemetry, collected earlier and subjected to complex analysis, also shows how the rover bounced across the floor of Gusev Crater before finally rolling to a stop.

Michael Malin, principal investigator of a high-resolution camera aboard NASA's Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft, unveiled a dramatic photograph showing Spirit, it's parachute and its heat shield resting on the surface of Mars. The remarkable photograph even shows several of Spirit's bounce marks in the martian soil.


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: gusev; jpl; mars; marsrover; mer; nasa; rover; spirit
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Ctrl-Alt-Del didn't work, but I wouldn't bet against NASA/JPL getting it fixed and into "workable" order.
1 posted on 01/23/2004 4:35:20 PM PST by Hiwayman
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To: Hiwayman
This would not have happened if we had sent people up there instead! Just proves that nasa [read as; never a stright answer] can waste more money than we can provide!
2 posted on 01/23/2004 4:45:11 PM PST by TMSuchman (sic semper tranis,semper fi! & you can't fix stupid either!)
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To: Hiwayman
It seems unlikely that they could have completely written their operating system from scratch. I wonder whose they modified and to what extent the choice was controversial.
3 posted on 01/23/2004 4:46:17 PM PST by Steve Eisenberg
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To: Steve Eisenberg
The OS and processor were "borrowed" (elements) from the successful Pathfinder mission in 1997 and dates to the late 1980's.
4 posted on 01/23/2004 4:49:50 PM PST by Hiwayman
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To: Hiwayman; bonesmccoy; Howlin; KevinDavis
The crippled Spirit rover remains in critical condition on the surface of Mars, engineers said today, the victim of ongoing electronic seizures that have caused its central computer to reboot itself more than 60 times over the past two days.

Some of the early mainframes had problems like that!!

5 posted on 01/23/2004 4:52:37 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (The terrorists and their supporters declared war on the United States - and war is what they got!!!!)
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To: Hiwayman
Spirit went on the blink Wednesday as it was carrying out a procedure to calibrate drive motors used by its thermal emission spectrometer. Prior to that moment, everything was operating normally. But some event, possibly a hardware failure of some sort, threw the rover's electronic brain for a loop.


6 posted on 01/23/2004 4:52:45 PM PST by ambrose
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To: Phil V.
Excessive rebooting!
7 posted on 01/23/2004 4:54:11 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (The terrorists and their supporters declared war on the United States - and war is what they got!!!!)
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To: Hiwayman
Communication was at 120 bits per second. Like the old days of 300 baud modems, only even slower. Don't even think about graphics.
8 posted on 01/23/2004 4:54:35 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the Law of the Excluded Middle)
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To: ambrose
ROFL!!!
9 posted on 01/23/2004 4:55:09 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (The terrorists and their supporters declared war on the United States - and war is what they got!!!!)
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To: TMSuchman
This would not have happened if we had sent people up there instead!

This cost $410 million. A single shuttle launch costs $500 million, generates little science and, even though often in support of the ISS, not enought good PR for Putin to support us even with words in Iraq. In my opinion, we should learn from the mistakes and send up more and more unmanned missions both to thoroughly explore Mars while setting up a permanent robotic presence complete with a small power plant. Then we can sent people as one-way colonists. Rushing into a manned mission will result in a one time deal that drains all other space budgets, as does the existing manned program.

10 posted on 01/23/2004 4:55:12 PM PST by Steve Eisenberg
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To: Hiwayman
Time to bring in the Spirit Communications Specialist:


11 posted on 01/23/2004 4:59:15 PM PST by mikrofon (Or maybe the 'Breck Girl'?)
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To: NormsRevenge
Mars news!

See above!

12 posted on 01/23/2004 5:01:24 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach (The terrorists and their supporters declared war on the United States - and war is what they got!!!!)
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To: mikrofon

13 posted on 01/23/2004 5:01:46 PM PST by al baby (Hope I don't get into trouble for this)
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To: Hiwayman
Several people were touting the use of Linux as the OS on this rover. I wonder if they will be commenting on this excessive rebooting. I could care less whether it is Linux, MS, or OSX. Just find it funny that software, no matter who writes it has the potential to fail. Or it could just be a hardware problem and Lixus is rock solid.
14 posted on 01/23/2004 5:03:19 PM PST by PFKEY
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To: mikrofon
Have they tried...?


15 posted on 01/23/2004 5:03:30 PM PST by COBOL2Java (If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you are reading this in English, thank a soldier.)
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To: ambrose

16 posted on 01/23/2004 5:06:32 PM PST by Momaw Nadon (Goals for 2004: Re-elect President Bush, over 60 Republicans in the Senate, and a Republican House.)
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To: Hiwayman
I am starting to think that something on Mars, an unkown element perhaps, is the cause of all these failures.
17 posted on 01/23/2004 5:09:56 PM PST by raybbr
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To: COBOL2Java
Dunno, but they're really desperate if they dig this one up:


18 posted on 01/23/2004 5:10:42 PM PST by mikrofon
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To: Hiwayman
"This morning, we sent an early beep to the spacecraft and did not get a response," Theisinger said. "As we were preparing to send a second, the spacecraft talked to us. We got very fractional frames and then moved very quickly to ask it to speak to us for 30 minutes at 120 bits per second. We got 20 minutes of transmission in that occasion, which was a single frame of engineering data repeated.."

I suggest they send a third message threatening to off the little bastard, whereupon it might decide to cooperate.
19 posted on 01/23/2004 5:18:54 PM PST by Bars4Bill
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To: Bars4Bill
I'm sorry, Dave. I can't allow that to happen.
20 posted on 01/23/2004 5:22:01 PM PST by 11B3 (Let's get as much of our nation back as we can in 2004.)
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