Updated at 3:10 pm PST
NASA's Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft has begun firing thruster
engines for the first and largest flight-path adjustment of the trip
from Earth to Mars.
PASADENA, Calif. -- An engine firing on Jan. 11 will be the biggest
maneuver that NASA's Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft will perform on
its flight between Earth and Mars.
The action will use a choreographed sequence of firings of eight
thruster engines during a period of about 175 minutes beginning at 3
p.m. PST (6 p.m. EST or 2300 Universal Time). It will redirect the
spacecraft more precisely toward Mars to land at Gale Crater. The
trajectory resulting from the mission's Nov. 26, 2011, launch
intentionally misses Mars to prevent the upper stage of the launch
vehicle from hitting the planet. That upper stage was not cleaned the
way the spacecraft itself was to protect Mars from Earth's microbes.
The maneuver is designed to impart a velocity change of about 12.3 miles per hour (5.5 meters per second).
"We are well into cruise operations, with a well-behaved spacecraft
safely on its way to Mars," said Mars Science Laboratory Cruise
Mission Manager Arthur Amador, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, Calif. "After this trajectory correction maneuver, we expect
to be very close to where we ultimately need to be for our entry point
at the top of the Martian atmosphere."
The mission's schedule before arrival at Mars on Aug. 5 in PDT
(Aug. 6 in Universal Time and EDT) includes opportunities for five more
flight path correction maneuvers, as needed, for fine tuning.
The Jan. 11 maneuver has been planned to use the spacecraft's
inertial measurement unit to measure the spacecraft's orientation and
acceleration during the maneuver. A calibration maneuver using the
gyroscope-containing inertial measurement unit was completed
successfully on Dec. 21. The inertial measurement unit is used as an
alternative to the spacecraft's onboard celestial navigation system due
to an earlier computer reset.
Diagnostic work continues in response to the reset triggered by use
of star-identifying software on the spacecraft on Nov. 29. In tests at
JPL, that behavior has been reproduced a few times out of thousands of
test runs on a duplicate of the spacecraft's computer, but no resets
were triggered during similar testing on another duplicate. The
spacecraft itself has redundant main computers. While the spacecraft is
operating on the "A side" computer, engineers are beginning test runs
of the star-identifying software on the redundant "B side" computer to
check whether it is susceptible to the same reset behavior.
The Mars Science Laboratory mission will use its car-size rover,
Curiosity, to investigate whether the selected region on Mars inside
Gale Crater has offered environmental conditions favorable for
supporting microbial life and favorable for preserving clues about
whether life existed.
On Jan. 15, the spacecraft operations team will begin a set of
engineering checkouts. The testing will last about a week and include
tests of several components of the system for landing the rover on Mars
and for the rover's communication with Mars orbiters.
The spacecraft's cruise-stage solar array is producing 780 watts.
The telecommunications rate is 2 kilobits per second for uplink and
downlink. The spacecraft is spinning at 2.04 rotations per minute. The
Radiation Assessment Detector, one of 10 science instruments on the
rover, is collecting science data about the interplanetary radiation
environment.
As of 9 a.m. PST (noon EST, or 1700 Universal Time) on Saturday,
Jan. 7, the spacecraft will have traveled 72.9 million miles (117.3
million kilometers) of its 352-million-mile (567-million-kilometer)
flight to Mars. It will be moving at about 9,500 mph (15,200 kilometers
per hour) relative to Earth and at about 69,500 mph (111,800
kilometers per hour) relative to the sun.
JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in
Pasadena, manages the Mars Science Laboratory mission for the NASA
Science Mission Directorate, Washington.
More information about Curiosity is online at: http://www.nasa.gov/msl and http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/ . You can follow the mission on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/marscuriosity and on Twitter at: http://www.twitter.com/marscuriosity .
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
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