Projects: Mars Climate Sounder Team Website
Spacecraft Set to Reach Milestone, Reports Technical Glitches
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
February 7, 2007
NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft this month is set to surpass
the record for the most science data returned by any Mars spacecraft. While
the mission continues to produce data at record levels, engineers are examining
why two instruments are intermittently not performing entirely as planned.
All other spacecraft instruments are operating normally and continue to
return science data.
Since beginning its primary science phase in November
2006, the orbiter has returned enough data to fill nearly 1,000 CD-ROMs.
This ties the record for Mars data sent back between 1997 and 2006 by NASA's
Mars Global Surveyor mission.
In late November 2006, the spacecraft team operating the High Resolution
Imaging Science Experiment camera on Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter noticed
a significant increase in noise, such as bad pixels, in one of its 14 camera
detector pairs. Another detector that developed the same problem soon after
launch has worsened. Images from the spacecraft camera last month revealed
the first signs of this problem in five other detectors.
While the current
impact on image quality is small, there is concern as to whether the problem
will continue to worsen.
In-flight data show that more warming of the camera's
electronics before taking an image reduces or eliminates the problem. The
imaging team aims to understand the root cause of the worsening over time
and to determine the best operational procedures to maximize the long-term
science benefits. The camera continues to make observations and is returning
excellent images of the Martian surface.
The second instrument concern
aboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is related to an instrument designed
to routinely scan from the surface across the atmosphere above Mars' horizon.
The Mars Climate Sounder maps the temperature, ice clouds and dust distributions
in the atmosphere on each of nearly 13 orbits every day. In late December,
the sounder appeared to skip steps occasionally, so that its field of view
was slightly out of position. Following uplink of new scan tables to the
instrument, the position errors stopped and the instrument operated nominally.
In mid-January, the position errors reappeared. Although still intermittent,
the errors became more frequent, so the instrument has been temporarily
stowed while the science team investigates the problem.
The rate of data
return is expected to increase over the coming months as the relative motions
of Earth and Mars in their orbits around the sun shrink the distance between
the planets. By the conclusion of its first science phase in 2008, the
mission is expected to have returned more than 30 terabits of science data,
enough to fill more than 5,000 CD-ROMs. Observations will be used to evaluate
potential landing sites for future missions and to increase our understanding
of Mars and how planets change over time.
The mission is managed by NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., for NASA's Science Mission
Directorate, Washington. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, Colo., is
the prime contractor and built the spacecraft.
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Guy Webster 818-354-6278
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Dwayne Brown 202-358-1726
NASA Headquarters, Washington
NEWS RELEASE: 2007-013
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