quote:Countdown Nears: Final Tests
The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft performed an integrated system test
with its Atlas V rocket on Monday, August 1, 2005, in the Atlas Vertical Integration Facility.
This test confirmed the team’s ability to communicate with the orbiter atop the rocket.
Preparations are underway for a final simulated countdown on Thursday, August, 4, 2005.
Pictured is the encapsulated Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter inside the Vertical Integration
Facility on Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.
Credit: NASA
nee...Deze nietquote:Op vrijdag 5 augustus 2005 00:14 schreef Jegorex het volgende:
Deze gaat dus niet landen op mars?
http://www.demorgen.be/telex/artikel.html?news=B266797quote:Lancering Amerikaanse Marssonde uitgesteld (09/08 21:43)
CAPE CANAVERAL/BRUSSEL 09/08 (BELGA) = De voor woensdag voorziene lancering van een onbemande Amerikaanse sonde naar de planeet Mars is omwille van een technisch probleem met een dag uitgesteld. Normaal zou een krachtige Atlas-5 draagraket vanop Cape Canaveral op de middag de Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter naar de Rode Planeet slingeren. Maar er is een probleem met de raket van Lockheed Martin opgedoken. De lancering is nu voor donderdag gepland. Het lanceervenster gaat open om 13.50 uur Belgische tijd en gaat weer dicht om 15.35 uur Belgische tijd. De nieuwe Marssonde moet onze buurplaneet zeer gedetailleerd in kaart brengen en op die manier toekomstige missies voorbereiden. (BAR) (Belga)
THNX voor infoquote:Op woensdag 10 augustus 2005 00:02 schreef zakjapannertje het volgende:
hmm, overmorgen dus...
[..]
http://www.demorgen.be/telex/artikel.html?news=B266797
http://www.nasa.gov/home/(...)2_MRO_postponed.html
quote:Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Launch Postponed
Tomorrow morning's launch of the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) has been postponed by at least one day. At present, liftoff is scheduled for no earlier than 7:50 a.m. on August 11.
The launch was postponed due to a failure of a Redundant Rate Gyro Unit (RRGU) at the manufacturer. This unit is similar to two RRGUs that are part of the flight control system on the Altas V launch vehicle at Launch Complex 41 at Kennedy Space Center, Florida.
The engineering team is evaluating whether the failure that occurred in the testing at the manufacturer has any effect on other RRGUs in the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter's Atlas V.
En ik kan er niet naar kijkenquote:Op woensdag 10 augustus 2005 00:16 schreef -CRASH- het volgende:
LANCERING is nu op DONDERDAG.
tussen 13.50 tot 15.35
Is er op je werk geen pc met internetverbinding naar Nasa TV?quote:Op donderdag 11 augustus 2005 11:54 schreef -CRASH- het volgende:
[..]
En ik kan er niet naar kijken![]()
Ik moet #%#@* gaan werken tot 23:00
Maar waarshijnlijk wordt de lancering een paar uur opgeschoven,
omdat ze 1:30 achter liggen op hun schema vanwege slecht weer
PC's genoeg op het werkquote:Op donderdag 11 augustus 2005 12:03 schreef Yosomite het volgende:
[..]
Is er op je werk geen pc met internetverbinding naar Nasa TV?
Dat is een secundaire arbeidsvoorwaarde.![]()
quote:Op donderdag 11 augustus 2005 14:50 schreef Yosomite het volgende:
Het lijkt erop dat het niet doorgaat vandaag.
Problemen:
Sensors van het automatische vloeibare waterstof tanken gaven een foutmelding: er stroomde geen waterstof naar binnen, terwijl ze het wel zagen stromen.
Automatisch tanken werd softwarematig gestopt.
Er werd geprobeerd handmatig te gaan tanken, maar veiligheidssoftware sloot de systemen af.
De waterstoftanks worden nu weer leeg gepompt.
quote:-Crash- zal blij zijn (als een boer die kiespijn heeft misschien)
Hopelijk kan de MRO de kleur groen van rood onderscheiden, want daar heeft de nasa nogal moeite mee....quote:
Het is alweer een aantal jaren geleden ....quote:Op zaterdag 20 augustus 2005 21:24 schreef McGry het volgende:
ff iets semi-offtopic: ik dacht me ter herrinneren dat er een (groot) aantal maanden een keer zo´n duur onderzoeks-unitje van de nasa tegen mars aan kapot was geklapt omdat de software half in km/h en half in Mile/h was geschreven
... (of de gebruiker andere eenheden invoer oid).
Wie weet waar ik het over heb? Of komt dit belachelijke scenario echt alleen in mijn hoofd voor? Ik dacht het me echt te herrineren, maar ik probeer het nu even terug te googlen, en ik kan zo snel echt niets vinden... Iemand? Naam van die sonde? Datum? Link?
Met die laatste zit je in ieder geval goed! Bedankt voor het antwoord! Wat gerichter googlen naar de Beatle 2 geeft inderdaad aan dat er geruchten zijn dat die is ´neergestort´ omdat "iemand vergeten was even naar metric om te rekenen".. Of het nu waar is of niet, ik kan dit voorbeeld goed gebruikenquote:Op zaterdag 20 augustus 2005 22:25 schreef -CRASH- het volgende:
[..]
En volgens mij was het de Beagle2 die de fout had met de "metric system" (KM/Miles)
of zit ik nu met 2 situaties door elkaar
http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Mars-Climate-Orbiterquote:...
The Mars Climate Orbiter was destroyed when a navigation error caused the spacecraft to miss its intended 140 - 150 km altitude above Mars during orbit insertion, instead entering the Martian atmosphere at about 57 km. The spacecraft would have been destroyed by atmospheric stresses and friction at this low altitude. A review board found that some data was calculated on the ground in English units (pounds) and reported that way to the navigation team, who were expecting the data in metric units (newtons).
...
quote:Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Halfway to Destination
By Alicia Chang Associated Press posted: 21 November 2005 09:00 am ET
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A NASA spacecraft is halfway toward Mars where it is expected to collect more data on the Red Planet than all previous Martian explorations combined.
The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter successfully fired its six engines for 20 seconds last week to adjust its flight path in anticipation of a March arrival. It will fine-tune its trajectory two more times before it enters orbit around Mars, said Allen Halsell, deputy navigation chief at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena.
Once in orbit, the two-ton spacecraft will join a trio of probes currently flying around Mars.
The orbiter is loaded with some of the most sophisticated science instruments ever flown into space, including a telescopic camera that can snap the sharpest pictures yet of the planet's rust-colored surface.
Previous spacecraft that have landed, circled or zipped past Mars have shot tens of thousands of images, but only about 2 percent of the planet has been seen at high resolution.
The orbiter also will continue to seek evidence of water, scan the surface for sites to land future robotic explorers and serve as a communications link to relay data to Earth. Already, it has successfully returned data at 6 megabits per second—about the speed of filling a CD-ROM every 16 minutes.
The reconnaissance orbiter was launched aboard an Atlas V rocket in August for the 310-million mile journey to the Red Planet. Its primary mission ends in 2010, but scientists say it has enough fuel to last until 2014. The $750 million mission is managed by JPL.
En het eerst dat ie kan gaan doen is (de restanten van) Beagle 2 op de foto zettenquote:Op donderdag 22 december 2005 20:10 schreef -CRASH- het volgende:
Nog FF en hij is er...
This image shows the relative position of the planets
in the inner solar system and the Mars Reconnaissance
Orbiter's location within that context.
[afbeelding]
MRO moet die theorie nog bevestigen met scherpere beelden.quote:Op donderdag 22 december 2005 21:43 schreef BabeWatcher het volgende:
http://www.urania.be/berichten/toonbericht.php?id=2336
De Beagle 2 is ws gevonden.
[afbeelding]
Toch raar dat ik op de satellietfoto van mijn huis mijn auto kan herkennen en van Mars de plaatjes nog waziger zijn dan ze ten tijde van de Voyager-missies waren.
quote:Op donderdag 22 december 2005 22:09 schreef Kered het volgende:
[..]
MRO moet die theorie nog bevestigen met scherpere beelden.
Die wazige Mars foto's is ook werk van de NASA. Ze doen het expres.
"NASA saboteert de echte kleuren van Mars"
Is het nog geen Novemberquote:Arrival Time Nears For New Mars Probe
By Leonard David Senior Space Writer posted: 24 February 2006 04:39 pm ET
NASA is ready to add one more spacecraft to the constellation of orbiters and landers exploring the red planet.
The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) is ready to put the brakes on, slowing itself down for insertion into orbit around the planet. Arrival time is March 10 as MRO fires its main thrusters to slow itself enough to be captured by Mars’ gravity.
Launched last August, the instrument-loaded spacecraft has journeyed across the vacuum void and will soon begin its unprecedented surveying of Mars.
MRO has been performing extremely well during its cruise to the red planet, said Doug McCuistion, NASA Mars Exploration Program Director at NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C.
Given earlier Mars missions that have failed to reach the planet, McCuistion cautioned: “Mars is hard. Mars can be unpredictable.” Getting into Mars orbit is not an easy task, he said during an MRO press briefing held today at NASA Headquarters.
“We’re 95 percent there,” said James Graf, MRO Project Manager at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California. JPL is managing the $720 million mission for the NASA Science Mission Directorate.
Crucial maneuver
To slip into Mars orbit, MRO will fire its thrusters for about 27 minutes—decreasing the velocity of the spacecraft by 18 percent. That maneuver is crucial; otherwise the probe will sail right past Mars.
The process of slowing down MRO at Mars is going to be a nail biter for ground controllers.
“We’re doing a lot of first events,” Graf explained. First, the propellant system to fire MRO’s thrusters must be pressurized. In addition, there are software patches onboard the spacecraft that have not been used before, he said.
Once MRO is firing its thrusters, it will go behind Mars—out of contact with mission controllers. “We’ll be out of touch for the next 30 minutes…so we will not see the end of the burn itself,” Graff said.
Start of the suspenseful Mars Orbit Insertion (MOI) thruster firing is 1:25 p.m. Pacific Standard Time, with MRO coming out from behind the planet at 2:16 p.m. PST.
Deep dipping
Given a successful MOI, the spacecraft will spend half a year dipping in and out of Mars’ atmosphere in a process tagged as “aerobraking”—adjusting its initial 35-hour elongated orbit into a nearly circular, two-hour loop around Mars.
MRO’s aerobraking is to take place from March into October and calls for hundreds of precision-controlled dips into the upper atmosphere of Mars. Those dips have to be deep enough to slow the spacecraft by atmospheric drag, but not so deep that the orbiter becomes overheated.
The primary science-gathering phase of MRO is slated to start in November 2006 and last for over two years.
“MRO opens a new chapter in the history of Mars exploration,” said Bob Berry, Director of Space Exploration Systems at Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company near Denver, Colorado. The aerospace firm designed, built and operates MRO. The spacecraft carries six instruments and features a set of solar arrays that stretch tip-to-tip some 46 feet (14 meters), he said.
Berry said that MRO carries enough propellant and energy supply to last more than 10 years.
Over and under observations
MRO totes powerful instruments that can investigate every level of Mars: From underground layers to the top of the planet’s atmosphere.
For one, the Mars-bound spacecraft is hauling the most powerful telescopic camera ever sent outward to scan another planet. That gear can spot rocks the size of a small desk.
MRO will chart water-related deposits in areas as small as a baseball infield. The Italian space agency supplied the mission with a radar designed to probe for buried ice and water.
Also, a weather camera will monitor the entire planet daily, while an infrared sounder is assigned the duty to gauge atmospheric temperatures and the movement of water vapor.
JPL’s Graf said that MRO will return more data than all previous Mars missions combined.
Swimming in the data stream
Thanks to the huge amount of data streaming from MRO, scientists can expect a real intellectual leap forward in better understanding the red planet, said Michael Meyer, NASA Mars Lead Scientist at NASA Headquarters.
Along with revealing Mars as never before, Meyer said MRO will guide future mission decisions too.
MRO’s powerful sensors can scope out the landing spot near the northern polar ice cap where NASA’s Phoenix lander is slated to touch down in 2008, as well as the exploration zone in which the space agency’s next rover—the Mars Science Laboratory—will head for after its launch in 2009.
Even those “little rovers that just won’t quit”—NASA’s Spirit and Opportunity robots—can be seen by MRO, said NASA’s McCuistion. MRO can also provide, he added, useful data for some of the early decision-making as to where future human explorers can safely land on Mars.
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