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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: communications glitch + mars lander + lander's  Related to the article below (Last Update: 6/5/2008)


ABC News
Communications Glitch Delays Mars Lander Digging
ABC News -
The Phoenix lander's first dig into the Martian soil for scientific study was delayed Wednesday because of a communications glitch on a spacecraft that ...
Communications glitch delays Mars lander digging The Associated Press
NASA delays Mars dig due to communication glitch Xinhua
Glitch delays Mars lander's dig BBC News
Telegraph.co.uk - Xinhua
all 683 news articles »

The Associated Press
Communications glitch delays Mars lander digging
The Associated Press - Jun 4, 2008
LOS ANGELES (AP) ? The Phoenix lander's first dig into the Martian soil for scientific study was delayed Wednesday because of a communications glitch on a ...

The Province
Phoenix Mars Lander overcomes radio glitch
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - May 28, 2008
A day after a radio glitch interrupted communications between Nasa and its lander, mission managers confirmed new instructions to unstow the arm had been ...
Radio glitch cut communication with Mars lander New Scientist (subscription)
Radio glitch hinders Mars lander mission AFP
Phoenix Mars Lander to Flex Robotic Arm Space.com
RTT News - New Scientist (subscription)
all 3,738 news articles »

AFP
Phoenix to dig into Mars soil in first probe
AFP -
... be hampered by glitches in communications between Phoenix and the Odyssey Mars orbiter, which relays instructions and data between Earth and the lander. ...

WBT
Glitch delays plan for maneuvering Mars lander arm
The Associated Press - May 27, 2008
That stopped communications between it and the lander. But Li and others say it is not a significant problem. Peter Smith of the University of Arizona, ...
Radio glitch slows Mars ice digging Arizona Republic
Minor Radio Glitch Hinder's Phoenix Mars Lander Digging Activities ... AHN
Radio glitch slows science experiments on Mars Lander Arizona Daily Star
New York Times - Journal and Courier
all 593 news articles »

Seattle Times
Radio glitch fixed; Phoenix Mars Lander ready to dig
Seattle Times, United States - May 28, 2008
The Phoenix Mars lander may begin moving its robotic arm today after a communications glitch with an orbiter delayed work two days into the mission. ...

The Associated Press
Glitch delays plan for maneuvering Mars lander arm
The Associated Press - May 27, 2008
The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter turned its UHF radio off, possibly because of a cosmic ray, cutting off communications with the lander, said Fuk Li, ...
The news minute: Mars, gas prices, kissing and cute baby whales
Seattle Post Intelligencer -
Yet another communications glitch has prevented the Phoenix Mars Lander from digging into the Martian soil. According to the Associated Press, ...

The Associated Press
NASA begins releasing robotic arm of Mars lander
The Associated Press - May 28, 2008
The Phoenix lander, which arrived on Mars on Sunday, is in excellent shape, said project manager Barry Goldstein. He said the communications glitch was only ...

AFP
NASA restores radio contact with Phoenix Mars lander
AFP - May 28, 2008
WASHINGTON (AFP) ? NASA has cleared up a malfunction that for several hours caused a rupture in communications between Phoenix Mars Lander, ...
Source: Google News

[PDF] SOFTWARE ENGINEERING -
IBL Form, MO Failure, MPL Failure - cs.uta.fi
... "It was a computer problem." The glitch occurred in ... Inadequate communications between
project ... ensure that a similar mishap is avoided with the Mars Polar Lander ...
-

[PDF] Mars Microrover Telecom Subsystem Lln van Nieuwstadt, Sami Asmar, Scot Stride, Robert Thomas, Jan …
L van Nieuwstadt - trs-new.jpl.nasa.gov
... Mars Microrover had a three-year hardware delivery ... interface tests/agreement with
the Lander software team ... wc stumbled into a communication ?glitch? at the ...
-

[PDF] Mars Microrover Telecom Subsystem
L Nieuwstadt, S Asmar, S Stride, R Thomas, J … - 1997 - trs-new.jpl.nasa.gov
... Mars Microrover had a three-year hardware delivery ... interface tests/agreement with
the Lander software team ... wc stumbled into a communication ?glitch? at the ...
-

SPACE SCIENCE: Reports Will Urge Overhaul and Delays to NASA's Mars Missions
A Lawler - Science, 2000 - sciencemag.org
... missions, set up a communications and navigation ... And the overall success of Mars
Global Surveyor, despite some notable glitches, raised expectations ...

[PDF] SOFTWARE ENGINEERING -
IB Letter, MO Failure - cs.uta.fi
... "It was a computer problem." The glitch occurred in ... Inadequate communications between
project ... ensure that a similar mishap is avoided with the Mars Polar Lander ...
-

… Royce Caines, Cheryl C. Patterson The Authors Uma V. Sridharan, Lander University, Greenwood, South … -
WR Caines - Supply Chain Management: An International Journal, 2005 - emeraldinsight.com
... The increase in communications capabilities offered by the internet ... In such cases
glitches in implementing supply chain ... in turn routed their orders to Mars Inc ...

PLANETARY SCIENCE: Flawless Hardware, Fallible Humans
RA Kerr - Science, 1997 - sciencemag.org
... have been expected when Mars Pathfinder arrived ... the lander seems to have eliminated
the glitch. ... troubling miscues" began disrupting communications between the ...

By Jack Ganssle -
M Attacks - embedded.com
... The glitch was latched; at 40 meters altitude the ... on the coast phase to Mars still
devoured ... geosynchronous orbit with a military communications satellite aboard ...

Operator and software errors
O ERRORS - Springer
... Initial communications were to be made via NASA's Mars Odys ... Although this glitch
took 14 days to diagnose and ... An artist's impression of a Mars Exploration Rover ...

[BOOK] Going to Mars: The Stories of the People Behind NASA's Mars Missions Past, Present, and Future -
B Muirhead, J Reeves-Stevens, G Reeves-Stevens - 2004 - books.google.com
... this decade, three rovers, a lander, and two ... such as improved aerodynamic entry,
Mars orbital rendezvous ... and utilization, and optical communications?that can ...

Source: Google Scholar

LOS ANGELES —

The Phoenix lander's first dig into the Martian soil for scientific study was delayed Wednesday because of a communications glitch on a spacecraft that relays commands from Earth to the red planet.

The orbiting Odyssey satellite went into safe mode and failed to send instructions to Phoenix to claw into the permafrost to search for evidence of the building blocks of life, said Chad Edwards, chief telecommunications engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena.

It's the second time a relay problem has delayed the lander's schedule. The first glitch occurred two days after it landed, when another satellite, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, turned off its radio.

Engineers worked to fix the problem with Odyssey, which will remain offline until Saturday, Edwards said. A preliminary investigation revealed the safe mode was probably triggered by high-energy particles from space interrupting the satellite's computer memory.

"The lander is fine," Edwards said.

Phoenix set down in Mars' northern latitudes to study whether the polar environment is capable of supporting primitive life. It communicates with Earth through Odyssey and the Reconnaissance Orbiter, which make daily passes over the lander to send commands and beam back images.

With Odyssey temporarily out of service, engineers told the Reconnaissance Orbiter to be the middleman between the lander and Earth.

Phoenix had planned to dig the first of three shallow pits north of where it landed and dump the dirt into a tiny oven, where it will be baked and studied this week. The earliest the lander can start the excavation will be Thursday, when new commands will be sent up.

The green light to scrape the Martian surface came after an extensive check of Phoenix's 8-foot robotic arm and other scientific instruments.

"It's absolutely an incredibly science-rich location," said chief scientist Peter Smith of the University of Arizona, Tucson, who heads the three-month, $420 million mission.

Before the actual work, Phoenix had playtime in the Martian dirt, doing two practice runs that involved scooping up and then dumping out fistfuls of soil. The tests yielded an intriguing scientific find: In both cases, the loose soil was mixed with white bits that scientists believe are either surface ice or salt deposits.

Phoenix zeroed in on three sites to the right of the test dig area that scientists have playfully named Baby Bear, Mama Bear and Papa Bear, after the "Goldilocks" fairy tale.

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For the initial dig, scientists want the lander to cut into the Baby Bear site at an angle, dig three-tenths of an inch into the permafrost and drag the dirt into the arm's scoop like a backhoe.

Then Phoenix will swing its robotic arm 90 degrees and wait for further instructions to drop the scoopful of dirt into a miniature oven designed to heat the sample and analyze the vapors for traces of organic compounds, said Ashitey Trebi-Ollennu, a robotic arm engineer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Although the oven's spring-loaded doors did not fully open as scientists hoped, Smith said it should not be a problem. Over the next several days, Phoenix will scoop up soil from the other two sites for its microscope and wet chemistry lab to analyze.

Phoenix cannot detect fossils or living microbes. Instead, it will poke into the soil and ice to study whether liquid water ever existed and whether there are any organic compounds, those containing carbon and hydrogen atoms. Scientists generally agree that water, organics and a heat source are needed for a habitable environment.

Twin rovers that have been roaming near the Martian equator since 2004 have uncovered evidence that water once flowed at or near the surface of ancient Mars.

"We're just taking an exploratory step here," Smith said this week. "Our instruments are not designed to decode DNA molecules. ... We're looking for the basic ingredients that would allow life to prosper in this environment."

---

On the Net:

Phoenix Mars: http://phoenix.lpl.arizona.edu

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company


 

 
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