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Mars rovers surpass Red Planet endurance record STEPHEN CLARK SPACEFLIGHT NOW Posted: 20 May 2010 The Opportunity rover broke a 28-year-old Mars duration record Thursday, surpassing the Viking 1 lander to become the longest-lived spacecraft to ever operate on the Red Planet, at least until the identical Spirit rover awakes from a winter snooze.
Spirit likely already holds the endurance record, but officials at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., won't know for sure until the crippled rover wakes up from a winter hibernation later this year. "Opportunity, and likely Spirit, surpassing the Viking Lander 1 longevity record is truly remarkable, considering these rovers were designed for only a 90-day mission on the surface of Mars," said John Callas, the rovers' project manager at JPL. Controllers haven't heard from Spirit since March 22, when engineers believe the rover's solar panels stopped producing enough electricity to operate the craft's communications system. In such an event, Spirit was programmed to go into hibernation with keep-alive heaters turned on to wait out the cold and dark winter. The rovers reached the Martian winter solstice May 12, the point where the least sunlight reaches their solar panels. Managers expect Spirit's power situation will improve in the coming months. Spirit has been stuck in a sand pit for more than a year, and its solar panels were left pointed away from the sun, which is low in the sky in the Martian winter. The attitude left Spirit without enough power to stay operational through the winter, forcing the rover into a winter snooze for the first time since it landed. "Spirit has likely passed that record, but right now, Spirit is deeply asleep," Callas said. "We haven't heard from the rover in about two months, but once she wakes up, she'll reclaim the title of longest-lived asset on the surface of Mars."
One of two identical landers dispatched to Mars in 1975, Viking 1 was the first U.S. spacecraft to land on Mars and return pictures. It continued returning data until NASA last heard from the lander on Nov. 11, 1982. Viking 2 successfully landed in September 1976 and stopped functioning in April 1980. Like the famous Spirit and Opportunity rovers, the Viking landers were originally designed to operate for just 90 days. Spirit and Opportunity touched down on Mars three weeks apart in January 2004. |
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This special publication features the photography of British astro-imager Nik Szymanek and covers a range of photographic methods from basic to advanced. Beautiful pictures of the night sky can be obtained with a simple camera and tripod before tackling more difficult projects, such as guided astrophotography through the telescope and CCD imaging.Hubble Reborn
The Planets
3D Universe
This new poster features some of the best pictures from NASA's amazing Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity. |
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