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anth
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# Posted: 21 Nov 2006 16:12
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After a decade in space, the Mars Global Surveyor space craft, in orbit of Mars, has fallen silent.

Attempts to contact it have been made since November the 4th. Only one very weak response was been recieved, and nothing has been heard for days.

NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) has been used to attempt locating the space agency’s Mars Global Surveyor (MGS)—all in an effort to discern what caused the spacecraft to fall silent several weeks ago.

If MGS is not heard from again. It would be a terrible loss. In its tremendous life time at Mars it's taken thousands of stunning images, mapped mars in 3D topographic high detail, and uncovered solid evidence of flowing water on mars.



Mars Recon Orbiter joins the search

After using several MRO instruments, the true whereabouts of MGS and its overall status are still unknown.

“We may have lost a dear old friend and teacher, Mars Global Surveyor,” said Michael Meyer, lead scientist for the Mars Explorations Program at NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C.

Meyer took part in an update today from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California with scientists, engineers and managers detailing the status of the MGS search and the probe’s past science accomplishments.

The briefing was part-wake, part holding out hope that the errant Mars probe could still be heard from again.


Gullies on Martian cliff sides a clue to water? MGS revealed this and many more gully candidates.

MGS also laid to rest the rather silly "face on mars" issue! MGS revealed it as nothing more than a regular martian rocky outcrop.




No definitive sighting

The last peep from MGS was on November 5, after notifying ground controllers that it had problems with a balky solar panel. For weeks, attempts to bring the Mars orbiter back on line were met with a silent response from the misbehaving probe.

“In the last two weeks we have not been able to establish communication with the spacecraft in a normal fashion,” said Fuk Li, Mars Program Manager at JPL. Over that period of time more than 800 command files were sent to re-establish communication with MGS, but none of them have been successful, he said.

To help in the search for MGS, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter was tasked last Friday, and again Monday to try and spot the MGS within a select region of space.

“Our preliminary analysis so far has not yielded any definitive sighting of MGS,” Li said.


Rover to lend an ear

A next step is use of the Opportunity Mars rover to listen for a low-power antenna on MGS. Earth controllers will try today and tomorrow to activate an MGS antenna to transmit a signal to Opportunity, now sitting near Victoria Crater within Meridiani Planum.

Whatever the rover picks up—if anything—would be relayed to the Mars Odyssey spacecraft also orbiting the red planet for rebroadcast back to Earth.

Jim Erickson, JPL project manager for MRO said that analysis of all the MRO search imagery is still underway. After studying the results from Opportunity’s listen session for MGS, as well as other assessments, a decision on utilizing the MRO again will be weighed, he told SPACE.com.

Tom Thorpe, Project Manager for the MGS at JPL said that the spacecraft’s power can vary considerably if one of its solar panels is turned completely away from the Sun – but is also a situation that creates a marginal spacecraft energy situation.

“The power could be supported on only one panel. As long as we’re getting enough power the spacecraft is capable of maintaining itself. We have attitude gas, for example, that could keep us in this mode for one or two years. It’s anybody’s guess as to where that stuck panel is pointed…but we feel that there’s a good chance that we’re getting enough power to maintain operations,” .

Fingers crossed this great robot can talk to us Earthlings once  again!



demonvamp
Member
# Posted: 21 Nov 2006 19:35
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What they need to do is on the next shuttle launch (Dec 7) get one of the astronauts to take careful aim and throw a spanner at it. works every time.

QD :D

anth
Member
# Posted: 22 Nov 2006 02:50
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After the huge amount of yelling it took to make NASA take the Shuttle to the Hubble Space Telescope to throw a spanner at that, one final time in a future mission. I wouldnt hold my breath. *L*

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