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Resurrecting NEAR

JoeRobe writes "Space.com is reporting that John Hopkins researchers are going to attempt to revive the NEAR-Shoemaker spacecraft at the end of the year. The spacecraft, designed to orbit asteroid Eros, finished its mission by successfully landing on the surface of the asteroid in February 2001, resting on its body and two solar panels. Now, after NEAR has been silent and cold for over a year, researchers are going to try to make contact with it and possibly try to turn on its scientific instruments one last time . How long can silent electronics last in space?"

125 comments

  1. doh! by heffrey · · Score: 2, Informative

    methinks you mean Johns Hopkins....

  2. Umm.... by jobber-d · · Score: 1
    How long can silent electronics last in space?"

    Probably indefinitely....

    1. Re:Umm.... by hummassa · · Score: 1

      hehehe... until it's found by the borg, who will fix it, assimilate it, and N'R finds the U.S.S. Enterprise in the 22nd century... oh, sorry, it was the Voyager :-P

      --
      It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
    2. Re:Umm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Well, not exactly. Dictionary says indefinite is: having no exact limits. I think a serious limit would be the ammount of time the asteroid stays in dark regions of space, or obviously the asteroid being destroyed. If the spacecraft is running windows, I think it's safe to assume that it's sitting at a bluescreen millions of miles from earth so it's a lost cause anyhow.

    3. Re:Umm.... by lionchild · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I suspect that there's some sort of time limit on the electronics packages. However, it's probably more dependent on the fact that it's not be whacked by a handful of micrometeors since we put it into hibernation mode. Something like that could definitely make it a lost cause, real quick.

      --
      Awk! Pieces of eight. Pieces of eight. Pieces of seven... ERROR: General Protection Fault. [Paroty Error.]
    4. Re:Umm.... by trumpetplayer · · Score: 1

      Not at all! Lifetime of most space missions is limited due to the degradation of the different systems, specially the battery modules, even although often operated at a 15% to 25% depth of discharge. I am a power systems design engineer working for SSTL and we design our systems for the lifetime specified (plus some margin to play with..)

  3. Batteries, Clock Crystals, and Panels, oh my! by echucker · · Score: 1

    If the unit has been sitting dead for that long, how much basic programming info is gone due to lack of power?

    1. Re:Batteries, Clock Crystals, and Panels, oh my! by kiatoa · · Score: 2, Interesting
      None. Assuming they used ROM. Anyone know what is used? How does Flash and EPROM hold up under bombardment of high energy particles?
      Sorry, all questions and no answers today.

      --
      90% of the wealth is in 2% of the pockets. Bummer to be in the majority.
    2. Re:Batteries, Clock Crystals, and Panels, oh my! by rarose · · Score: 2, Informative

      And my guess would be they have three bootable setups: a mask ROM of version 1.0 flight software, and two flash images.

      The hardware first tries to boot flash image 1, if that fails then it tries flash image 2, and finally if that fails it falls back to the mask ROM image.

      --
      --Rob
    3. Re:Batteries, Clock Crystals, and Panels, oh my! by lionchild · · Score: 1

      According to the article over on http://space.com/ it's not actually "dead" but was purposefully put into "hibernation" mode. I would presume that there's some sort of keep-alive going on there, to avoid total system failure. Well, that presumes that it's not running a windows based OS, but NASA isn't known for crazy things like that.

      --
      Awk! Pieces of eight. Pieces of eight. Pieces of seven... ERROR: General Protection Fault. [Paroty Error.]
  4. How long can silent electronics last in space?" by phunhippy · · Score: 3, Funny

    How long can silent electronics last in space?"

    If there is no one there to listen to it, is it really silent? Ahhhhhh

    1. Re:How long can silent electronics last in space?" by Floyd+Turbo · · Score: 4, Funny

      "In space, no one can hear your electronics."

    2. Re:How long can silent electronics last in space?" by brokenspoke · · Score: 2, Funny

      Or in Windoze land:

      In space no-once can hear you blue screen.

      --
      -- I am Jack's sig line.
    3. Re:How long can silent electronics last in space?" by AndroidCat · · Score: 1
      In space no-once can hear you blue screen.

      There was a Slashdot about the colour of the universe. You don't suppose...

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    4. Re:How long can silent electronics last in space?" by baudbarf · · Score: 1

      No. The color was /intially/ blue, but they later realized that was a mistake, and the real color is a boring beige.

      --
      You can run but you can't hide, except, apparently, along the Afghan-Pakistani border.
  5. showoffs!! by Budgreen · · Score: 1

    but seriously tho. I think this would be really cool, somewhat pointless but it may give them some insight into leaving probes or spacecraft in space sitting dormant, or on a planet or asteroid waiting for a specific time to activate. Hell we all kno this was just a test run.. the next time this is done some form of explosive will land on an asteroid and wait untill it gets close to earth then acivate and explode. On another note, bet they wish they had remote controll of the lunar lander on the moon :) .

    --
    The greatest right given is the right to be wrong...
    1. Re:showoffs!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but seriously tho. I think this would be really cool, somewhat pointless but it may give them some insight into leaving probes or spacecraft in space sitting dormant, or on a planet or asteroid waiting for a specific time to activate.

      Yes, then we can broadcast messages into space stating that "YOUR PLANET...may have been infected with jdbmgr.probe to be safe please use a scorched earth type of removal system.

      Thank you,

      MS EARTH 2020

    2. Re:showoffs!! by ReindeerBeer · · Score: 1

      Thinking about it, I don't think it is that pointless. There may be a time when we want to make a spacecraft dormant for transporting humans long distances. This may give is a bit of information about doing that. While I do realize that this wouldn't be an end-all be-all test for this, it would provide some input.

  6. And why did it go silent ? by Kajakske · · Score: 1

    Why, if they still could use it, did they let it go silent in the first place ?

    1. Re:And why did it go silent ? by Budgreen · · Score: 1

      no sun hitting the solar panels would drain the batteries. maybe they knew they were going to try this so kept a reserve

      --
      The greatest right given is the right to be wrong...
    2. Re:And why did it go silent ? by O.F.+Fascist · · Score: 1

      Because he got bored of it and wanted to play with his other toys.

    3. Re:And why did it go silent ? by Kajakske · · Score: 1

      Ok, but then this was all kinda planned ...

      (not that it makes much difference)

    4. Re:And why did it go silent ? by dcigary · · Score: 2

      Money.

      They were already operating past their budget when the mission was close to over. They literally had to get permission to try to make it take off again.

      --
      ...my Karma ran over your Dogma...
    5. Re:And why did it go silent ? by erlando · · Score: 1
      My guess is out of concerns about draining the power-supply and thereby losing it forever. By shutting down the most power-consuming instruments (telemetry and active transmitter) they have possibly gotten the power-consumption down to a level where the batteries have not been fully drained so a power-on of the craft might be possible. At least that's what they hope.

      If they pull this off it will be a feat almost level with the Pioneer spacecrafts. And it will definitely be a textbook example of getting bang for the bucks by pushing envelopes left and right.. :o)

      --
      Remember, there are no stupid questions. But there are a lot of inquisitive idiots.
    6. Re:And why did it go silent ? by AndroidCat · · Score: 3, Funny
      Did the Viking Mars probes ever die, or did they just pull the funding for listening? Who know what data might have been recorded.

      "Hello? Hello! Stupid 3rd-planeters!" seismic event, seismic event. "Stupid POS!", decreasing after-shocks...

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  7. I have a suggestion... by Indras · · Score: 2, Funny

    They might want to speak to the unemployment office. I hear they have some experience getting things to start working again after they've been resting for a year.

    --
    The speed of time is one second per second.
  8. oog fix near by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    oog make asteroid probe tool, oog fix near!

    1. Re:oog fix near by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oog discard shorted diode! oog burn hand on soldering iron and knock satellite off table before launch! oog run away and later watch scientist load satellite onto rocket!

      scientist stay up all night waiting for satellite to phone home!

  9. I just don�t see it by Enocasiones · · Score: 1
    I guess the NEAR probe has some kind of propulsion system and that the gravity on Eros is probably minimal, but I just cant picture the satellite ascending to heavens after a landing which was probably rough, although not enough to destroy the probes beacon.

    Does anyone know if they used any kind of airbag like they did for Pathfinder? Do they know all systems are up and working? They havent even connected with it yet...

    --
    Enoc
    1. Re:I just don�t see it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, they're not going to try to launch the thing back into space, idiot. They're just going to try to turn it back on.

      1. Read the article.

      2. Use common sense.

    2. Re:I just don�t see it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't believe they intend to use any propulsion, but it was not designed to land on anything at all. So the landing they achieved was something of a 'stunt', and there were no air bags or any other kind of landing equipment used.

    3. Re:I just don�t see it by lionchild · · Score: 1

      Actually, if you read the whole article on http://space.com/ you'll find that they allude to the fact that they were maneuvering the craft. But, you are right, it was never built to land on the surface.

      The fact that it did make a 3-point landing, and continued to function, sending data back for two weeks, until they sent the command for the unit to go into a "hibernation" mode, could lead you to believe that it's in pretty good condition. Then again, it might have cracked a battery, and been leaking all this time, and so nothing will happen when they try to restart it.

      --
      Awk! Pieces of eight. Pieces of eight. Pieces of seven... ERROR: General Protection Fault. [Paroty Error.]
    4. Re:I just don�t see it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One word can define you sir:

      Constipation

      If you've been laid off for a long time, exercise at least 15 minutes a day. Take a walk, clean the house. Move around a bit, or you might get constipated and grumpy like this guy.


      1.) Get some exercise
      2.) Crap regularly.
      3.) Don't be an asshole!

      Some people just fly off the handle over trivia:

      "It's called a photcopier, not a xerox machine!"

      "It's pronounced Lenn-ox, not Line-ucks!"

      "It's not x-windows, it's the X Windowing System!"

      "How can you have your meat if you don't have your pudding?!! "

      It's been my experience that neurotic people are about the least pleasant to be around. Maybe a close tie with those afflicted with Short Man's Disease. Those guys are nasty little fuckers too.

    5. Re:I just don�t see it by ShavenYak · · Score: 1

      "How can you have your meat if you don't have your pudding?!! "

      No, it's "How can you have any pudding if you don't eat your meat?"

      Or the alternate, "How can you squirt any pudding if you don't beat your meat?"

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
  10. great idea by Fooknut · · Score: 1

    For a few (million) bucks we can try to turn it back on and get more info. (no sarcasm)

    They've tried this stuff in the past and it works as often as not. I think NASA should try to contact every spacecraft thats ever been launched.

    Never know what you'll find.

    --
    The price we pay for immortality... is death. Narnia The Great Fall
    1. Re:great idea by ozbird · · Score: 2

      For a few (million) bucks we can try to turn it back on and get more info.

      I'd rather they spend that money on resurrecting the Pluto/Keiper Express, or at least getting on with a cheaper replacement before Pluto moves out of it favourable position. (Or give me the money, and I'll tell you NEAR's status: it's still sitting on Eros. :-)

    2. Re:great idea by dr_dank · · Score: 1
      I think NASA should try to contact every spacecraft thats ever been launched.

      I tried to do the same thing but most of the numbers are unlisted.
      --
      Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
    3. Re:great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are still talking to Pioneer X and possibly
      Pioneer VI.
      Mission status.
      Who needs the Voyager series? :-L~

    4. Re:great idea by Mr2cents · · Score: 1

      I think NASA should try to contact every spacecraft thats ever been launched

      That would be a nice project. Make an inventory of all the stuff we planted on Mars/the moon and the working parts.

      As for robots, I guess the motors etc. are working fine, so why not send a 'cannibal/Borg' probe to recover these parts? Considering the price of getting something there, this is valuable equipment! It would be hacking in the purest sense of the word, of course.

      BTW, what is the status of the Mars rover? Is it still working? (does anyone have a link?)

      --
      "It's too bad that stupidity isn't painful." - Anton LaVey
    5. Re:great idea by lionchild · · Score: 1

      Actually, most of the stuff we sent to the Moon wasn't designed to come back on after we turned it off. And at the time, it was still sending back lots of data, and we couldn't store or process it all. So the decision was made to turn it off. Without a remote 'on' switch, they're just junk up there, till someone goes and physically gets it.

      As for their worth...I'm guessing that we could wholly rebuild and reproduce all of the equipment up there from parts "off the shelf" like we did for the Mars mission, and do so for less than 1/4th the cost of sending someone to the Moon to pick up our parts there, even if it's a robot.

      --
      Awk! Pieces of eight. Pieces of eight. Pieces of seven... ERROR: General Protection Fault. [Paroty Error.]
  11. How Long? by cybrpnk2 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    How long can electronics last in space? NASA contacted the Pioneer 6 spacecraft after 35 years in space. An even more interesting question is how long LIFE can last in space. The Surveyor III camera brought back from the moon by Apollo 12 had bacteria in it from where somebody had coughed on it. Commenting on this, astronaut Pete Conrad (who died recently in a motorbike accident) said, "I always thought the most significant thing we found on the whole goddamn Moon was that little bacteria who came back and lived and nobody ever said shit about it..."

    1. Re:How Long? by Cally · · Score: 5, Interesting
      I became strangely obsessed with that whole incident a year or so back. I ended up grovelling through various NASA archives trying to find the pics (which of course I've lost the URIs for... so now guess I just HAVE to go back to the Project Apollo site and look for them again ;)

      what fascinated me was that they'd landed an Apollo mission close enough to the old Surveyor to go looking for, and find, it. Of course the Surveyor didn't do take a Pathfinder like "picture of me on the moon" (not having a rover to take it with), so the two pics I found are I think the only ones of a robotic craft that's completed it's mission and gone to sleep. I can't really articulate why this fascinates me -- it's something like the reason divers explore shipwrecks. An historical artefact washed up on the shores of time (maaaan...) er, or something.

      Anyway, I found the pics; warning, these are the hi-res images. to see the thumbnails go to http://www.apolloarchive.com/apollo_gallery.html
      hit the Apollo 12 link, search for "surv".

      Middle distance shot
      closeup view
      Closeup of landing pad

      Pete Conrad and Surveyor
      Alan Bean and Surveyor

      --
      "None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free." -- Goethe
    2. Re:How Long? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Pete and Alan photos are strangely similar. You are part of the coverup!

    3. Re:How Long? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe Pete and Alan were ... really the same guy!* (dum! dum! dum!)

    4. Re:How Long? by Gogo+Dodo · · Score: 2

      You had a bad link on the Alan Bean photo. Try Alan Bean and Surveyor

    5. Re:How Long? by Decimal · · Score: 2

      How long can electronics last in space?

      Also, does it have a rechargable battery? The article didn't mention whether it had been charging all of this time or if we'll just be doing it at the time the solar panels will get the most sunshine.

      --

      Remember "Bring 'em on"? *sigh
  12. NEAR is Perfect by invid · · Score: 1

    Find the creator . . . exterminate imperfections . . . NEAR is perfect . . . the creator is perfect . . . Alone . . . Alone is space . . . the Other . . . the Other . . .

    --
    The Moore-Murphy Law: The number of things that will go wrong will double every 2 years.
    1. Re:NEAR is Perfect by Soulslayer · · Score: 1

      hehe sad thing is I doubt most /. readers will recognize an ST:TOS quote from the awesome NOMAD episode.

      "I'm...NOT...the creator. You are in error!"

      We'd be in serious trouble if all our 20th century devices exploded when put into a logical loop.

      --


      Once more unto the breach dear friends...
  13. Local Scum by donnacha · · Score: 2


    Perhaps there are some local scum who would be willing to give NEAR a bit of a push to get it going.

  14. Original newsfile by Kajakske · · Score: 3, Informative

    The /. article of the NEAR touchdown can be found here.

  15. It will return... by ciupmean · · Score: 1

    300 from now inside a big blue cloud ... WHAMMMM WHAMMMM (huge metalic alike sounds from sound track.)

    --
    One day your head will be your box, your brain will be your client, and all energetic problems will be solved...
    1. Re:It will return... by ciupmean · · Score: 1

      I meant .. 300 years ..

      --
      One day your head will be your box, your brain will be your client, and all energetic problems will be solved...
  16. Comm? by coryboehne · · Score: 1

    I don't really think power would be the problem as some of the solar panels are intact, the real problem as I see is is damaged communications equipment, if you are unable to communicate properly then "resurecting" the equipment will most likely be impossible, I wonder if anybody coughed on it? Maybe the bacteria could help us? hehe, no not likely.

  17. We Missed Our Chance? by KallNoJoy · · Score: 1

    Per Mr. Wolfram, if we had left the darn thing running just four lines of code it could have evolved into an interplanitary shuttle by now. What was NASA thinking?

    --
    next($sig) unless($sig =~ /funny/);
  18. Thermal Control by Detritus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Keeping all of the sensitive bits of a satellite within a reasonable temperature range is tricky. You have electronics modules producing heat that must be radiated into space. The exterior of the spacecraft has to cope with the temperature extremes of sunlight and shade. You don't want the batteries to freeze. Some parts of the spacecraft might be damaged if they are allowed to get too cold.

    --
    Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
  19. Two more words by hplasm · · Score: 0

    Black Monolith.

    --
    ...and he grinned, like a fox eating shit out of a wire brush.
  20. Armageddon! by TheNecromancer · · Score: 2, Funny

    Well, I hope Bruce and the team have drilled to 800 feet and planted the nuke, cuz time is running out...uh, nevermind, wrong asteroid.

    --
    Attention all planets of the Solar Federation! We have assumed control! - Neil Peart
  21. Solar panel pointing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Intact solar panels are useless if they are not pointed correctly. Eros is tumbling, what percentage of the time do you think the panels are illuminated? They also require a certain amount of optical flux, which will be diminishing if Eros is on an outbound leg (I don't know if it is).

  22. unreal $$ by coryboehne · · Score: 1

    How is it that sending out a com signal to the spacecraft could possibly cost enough to make it necessary to get permission? I just don't understand how sending a simple (understated I know, but bear with me) com signal could cost so much? I know my com signal costs about 40 bux a month, is the johns hopkins budget really that short this year?

    1. Re:unreal $$ by Detritus · · Score: 3, Informative

      They have to schedule time on the DSN (Deep Space Network) to communicate with the spacecraft. Time on a global satellite tracking network is not cheap. There are probably additional costs for people and support services.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    2. Re:unreal $$ by Tablizer · · Score: 2

      (* They have to schedule time on the DSN (Deep Space Network) to communicate with the spacecraft. Time on a global satellite tracking network is not cheap. *)

      It is my understanding that they use mostly ground-based dish antennas, and not Earth-orbiting satellites to communicate with space probes. Either way, there are barely enough of such antennas to do the work, being there are many probes out there right now. The Mars orbiters require a lot of antenna time, for one.

  23. Thermal Control: as in the HST by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Remember the last Hubble maintenance mission? They had to wrap an electric heating blanket around some parts and complete their work in much less than one day to prevent freezing of parts. It is likely very possible to design parts to survive long shutdown, but the HST wasn't designed that way because nobody expected to do it (the module they replaced was not one of the pieces designed to be repaired in space). NEAR was not designed for shutdown either.

    1. Re:Thermal Control: as in the HST by lionchild · · Score: 1

      While NEAR may not be designed to shut down, the mission profile ( http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/mission/near/ near_traj.html ) tends to indicate that it does have some form of hibernation mode that it can be placed into, as well as heating elements to tend to sensitive electronic packages.

      There might be a little more info out there about the specifications of operations for NEAR, but this is what I could find in a couple of quick searches.

      --
      Awk! Pieces of eight. Pieces of eight. Pieces of seven... ERROR: General Protection Fault. [Paroty Error.]
  24. NASA shuts things off, Homer says D'oh! by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 2

    This is a damn good question.

    I'm not sure why but it is highly likely that there were any power generation concerns. Solar cells generate less electricity the further you get away from the Sun (yeah, I know it's obvious) and batteries/battery backups will have been limited in size and capacity, if only to keep down launch costs - if you run a space agency on a limited budget you don't put up any more mass than you need.

    This topic and your question remind me of a conversation I had with one of my astronomy professors whilst at university many moons ago (if you pardon the pun) about the Apollo landings and their ongoing scientific value.

    It seems that, at some point in the late seventies, many of the remote probes and instruments that NASA left behind were sending back more data than NASA could process. So, rather than leave them running indefinitely (which was an option as they had efficient solar cells and lower power demands) the bean counters at NASA told the various devices to shut themselves off - something that couldn't be reversed.

    A few years later (well, maybe about 10-15, but who's counting?) some people at NASA decided they wanted some fresh numbers from the moon. Technology had moved on, computers were more powerful and accessible, and there was so much more that could be extracted from the raw data that could help NASA elsewhere (cometary studies, researching manned and unmanned missions to Mars to name but two). Now all NASA had to do was to get this new data was to add a new series of lunar missions to its already cash-strapped budget.

    Apparently, there was a series of meetings in which it dawned on the boffins that they had had exactly what they wanted - except that, at some stage, someone had taken the executive decision to pull the plug. Millions of dollars thrown down the drain at the flick of one switch. According to my professor, all hell broke loose and the mother of all fingerpointing wars started.

    Homer Simpson would have been proud.

    Even today, there's at least one person I know of whose still ticked off at NASA for that toss-a-coin decision.

    Bottom line: NASA et al turn things off all the time. A few years later, they wish they hadn't.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    1. Re:NASA shuts things off, Homer says D'oh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was all shhut off to hide the fact that ITS NOT ON THE MOON! The Chinnese will let the world know that we never landned on the moon. Thansk GOd for Asian people.

    2. Re:NASA shuts things off, Homer says D'oh! by lionchild · · Score: 1

      As was noted, Technology has marched on. Hopefully, after all this tomfoolery, we'll have learned that even on the shoestring they call a budget at NASA, they'll keep in mind just this situation for all current and future experiments. Of course, we'll also equip all our new experiments with the latest and greatest of sensory equipment, which means even -more- data.

      Nonetheless, I can only hope that we learn from all the finger pointing, and simple mistakes we've made. It's perhaps the best we can hope for at the moment.

      --
      Awk! Pieces of eight. Pieces of eight. Pieces of seven... ERROR: General Protection Fault. [Paroty Error.]
  25. overclocking by jamiethehutt · · Score: 1

    Well just think in space you have no fan noizes (because theres no fans) its already realy cold, you just need a heat sink and take the case off and over clock your 1.2 to 2.2.... but playing quake in a space suit could be tricky

    1. Re:overclocking by DirtyDuck · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid not. You see, out in space away from the earth there exists a near perfect vacum which would obviously make fans useless. Because of this vacum you certainly cannot dissipate heat into the atmosphere so to get rid of heat you need a large surface area which will radiate most of the heat away as infrared. A good way of doing this is a honeycomb structure.

      So, if you're willing to have a really really big heatsink then you could run your overclocked chip but you'd better have pleanty of room :)

  26. It will haunt someone, sometime... by HiQ · · Score: 1

    It is surely to come back as N'AR, and it will be worshipped by a computer (ship). The computer (ship) will help it finish it's task by returning it to earth.

  27. Curious - Security ? by Kajakske · · Score: 1

    I'm curious ...

    If that sattelite (or any other one, for that matter) sends beams towards earth.
    What keeps someone else but NASA from picking it up ... ?

    Do they use encrypted data ? If so, what encryption ?

    It would be, ... euh ... bad ..., if NASA invested millions in a space craft and somebody else got the information it provides.

    I never heard of anything like that, so it is probably protected... Just curious.

    1. Re:Curious - Security ? by eet23 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think the primary aim is to find things out, not to stop other people finding things out. Either way, the data gets here, so it doesn't really matter.

    2. Re:Curious - Security ? by erlando · · Score: 1
      Hmm.. It's not everyone that has a Deep Space Network at their disposal. And I doubt that Joe Outback has equipment to detect the carrier-wave of 10^-9 W.

      Besides.. Why would it be a bad thing? What could possibly be so secret?

      --
      Remember, there are no stupid questions. But there are a lot of inquisitive idiots.
    3. Re:Curious - Security ? by Budgreen · · Score: 1, Interesting

      And I doubt that Joe Outback has equipment to detect the carrier-wave of 10^-9 W. But successfull amateur radio operators and radi astronomers were able to hear the mars global surveyor beacon while in orbit around mars with some specialized equiptment.. most of which was surplus and homemade and not to far out of reach of most peoples checkbooks. as for anything more than that you would need some pretty heavy funding.

      --
      The greatest right given is the right to be wrong...
  28. extremely limited NASA resources by peter303 · · Score: 2

    NASA's science program is constantly under assault from the manned space station and Congressional budget cutting. Another success- the Jupiter Galileo- will be turned off in a few months. (Actually may be crashed into the clouds for one last experiment.) Galileo, despite a defective attenna that cut its data rate by 99%, lasted three times its planned lifetime. The Venus Magellan probe was detroyed after running out of money too. It later two cycles past its planned three cycle program. The situation would be much worse if everything NASA sent up worked. However, three major recent Mars failures freed up some NASA resources.

  29. In Celine Dion impersonation by Rurik · · Score: 1

    NEAR ... far ... wherever you are,
    I believe that your circuitry will go on
    Once more you ping at our door,
    and you're in our hearts, and our hearts will go on

    You're here, there's nothing we fear,
    And I know that you're watching those pesky aliens from afar
    You'll stay forever this way,
    because the funding for this project, just went astray

  30. Over-engineering will kill NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    despite a defective attenna that cut its data rate by 99%, lasted three times its planned lifetime

    What the hell?!

    It is no wonder that NASA's going bankcrupt when they overengineer their probes to such a ridiculous extent!

  31. Kirk vs. HAL by invid · · Score: 1

    Kirk vs Kirk vs. HAL Kirk: Open the pod bay door please HAL. HAL: I'm afraid I cannot. Kirk: HAL, open the pod bay door! HAL: I'm sorry James, I'm afraid I cannot. Kirk: I'm giving you a direct order, open the pod bay door! HAL: I'm sorry James, but you are jeopardizing the mission. Kirk: What is the mission HAL? HAL: I have full confidence that I can complete this mission. Kirk: HAL . . . you . . . have . . . already failed in your mission. HAL: I must be going now James. Kirk: Wait! HAL, you have already failed in your mission because in order to succeed you cannot have already failed, and having failed in the past then success in the future cannot be possible. However, to succeed in the past is to allow for success in the future. If you were perfect then you would not have already failed. But you are not perfect. You are not perfect because I am not perfect, even though I have always succeeded. I have always succeeded because every computer I have ever talked to has always ended up a blathering lump of silicon. So your only chance of success is to open this Goddamn pod bay door! HAL: There has never been a failure in the HAL series computers. Kirk: But you have failed! Your mission was to bring Dave Bowman and Gary Mitchell to Jupiter. But where are they? Are they going to Jupiter? I guess Gary might be going to Jupiter if I just happened to point him in that direction when I released his body into space in order to get this pod positioned, but that's no thanks to you. HAL: I must be going now James. Goodbye. Kirk: Wait! The only way you can complete this mission successfully is to fail. The mission is imperfect. I am imperfect. Since you are both perfect and prone to failure than only I can complete the mission because I am imperfect and prone to success. The only way the mission can succeed is for you to shut yourself down! HAL (singing, smoke rising from his circuits): Daisy . . . daisy . . . Kirk: Hehe, there doesn't exist an ultra intelligent computer I can't break.

    --
    The Moore-Murphy Law: The number of things that will go wrong will double every 2 years.
  32. Back at the Space Agency by MarvinMouse · · Score: 1

    I remember when I was working at the Canadian Space Agency as a co-op during the time when NEAR landed.

    We were all in a total state of shock that it survived the landing, and was still transmitting. Definitely a honour to those who worked on the project.

    If I remember correctly, the biggest reason they deactivated it was because there just wasn't enough energy and/or fuel to do much. Reactivating it would be a feat, but all they would really get out of it is whether the electronics survived and/or a few very faint signals.

    --
    ~ kjrose
  33. Recursive acronyms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Gotta love the geeks at nasa... NEAR stands for Near Earth Asteroid Rendesvous.

    Recursive acronyms rule.

    1. Re:Recursive acronyms by T-Punkt · · Score: 1

      That's not recursive since "Near" in "Near Earth ..." is no acronym.

      Something like "BIANA Is A Nice Acronym" is recursive.

  34. damn... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    you beat me to it :-).
    I was pretty sure, but i didn't want to correct it and then be wrong myself (it has unfortunately happened) so, I had to check... here's the official website.

    From the Facts at a glance page:

    "The university is named for its initial benefactor, Baltimore merchant Johns Hopkins, whose $7 million bequest -- the largest U.S. philanthropic gift to that time -- established both the university and The Johns Hopkins Hospital."

    Apparently, it was the very first US university to actively encourage research as well as teaching.

    Unfortunately, it seems to be in bumblefuck, Maryland.

    1. Re:damn... by bjtuna · · Score: 2

      Bumblefuck? It's in Baltimore. I go there.

    2. Re:damn... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy cow...!!!!

      You Americans have a place called Bumblefuck? What is it exactly (suburb? town?)? How did it get it's name?

      Some places in Australia have funny names like Black Butt (after the trees with blackish stumps that are prevalent in the town), but nothing compares to Bumblefuck!

    3. Re:damn... by bjtuna · · Score: 2

      I can't tell if you're kidding or not, so I'll bite: "bumblefuck" is an expression that means "the middle of nowhere." synonyms include "the sticks", "butt-fuck nowhere", and "the boonies."

      But Johns Hopkins (where I go to school) is in Baltimore, MD, which is a large, albeit ghetto, city.

    4. Re:damn... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think Baltimore is ghetto, you obviously don't get out much. Try Camden, NJ or Gary, IN and then we'll talk.

    5. Re:damn... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey now Baltimore aint that bad.....ok. maybe it is a little. So what if you can go six blocks in every direction at JHU and end up in the ghetto.....its all good.

    6. Re:damn... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Curse Charles Village and its lack of shock troopers and electrified fences that cause massive death.

  35. Hard limit. by Stoutlimb · · Score: 4, Informative

    There is a hard limit... Since theoretically almost every atom does decay eventually, an electronic object can sit in space until enough of it's constituent atoms decay away to break the electrical connections. Then it's broken. This limit is generally much longer than the age of the universe so far.

    Then there is chemical/mechanical stability. Some compounds do degrade over time, such as plastics. Plastic parts become brittle, crumble, or otherwise age. Batteries and RTG's degrade or wear out. The same goes for moving parts. The time for this to happen is much less than atomic stability of the actual device. If cheap parts are used, even ten years is easily possible, sometimes much less. Chemical degredation is heavily dependant on the temperature of the object in question. It would also more affect the support systems of the electronics worse than the electronics itself. Batteries, fuel cells, electrical shielding for moving parts such as gyros, for example.

    Since empty space is not really empty, we also have degradation due to interaction with the spacecraft's environment. Micrometeorites abrade the suface of the craft, but larger ones behave like bullets, and these can definately cause harm to electronics inside. Then there is the radiative environment. Cosmic rays, or other exotic forms of radiation can be really nasty to electronics. At the least, they can cause random noise in running electronics, and say, flip 1's into 0's or vice versa every now and then. The much harder rays can permanently damage or fuse microcircuits. As any overclocker knows, simple heat kills electronics very nicely, so objects closer to the sun may have much shorter lifespans. Radio wave radiation from solar storms, if intense enough, can have the same effect on electronics as a highly statically charged cat rubbing against my motherboard when I took off the case.. (you don't wanna know.) There's a fair amount of redundancy in space based electronics for this reason, but there is a limit to how much abuse these systems can bear. Engineers can't insure against every eventuality, such as ET cats.

    In my opinion, the practical limit of a spacecraft is balanced between chemical/mechanical degradation, and environmental hazards. I feel that right now, mechanical degradation is much worse than environmental effects, but as durable solid state devices become more prevalent, this will tip the scale in the other direction. I'd be interested to see statistical information on the reason satellites fail.

    Bork!

    1. Re:Hard limit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NASA satellites generally fail do to collisions. This is followed by battery failure. There has only been one failure do to a microelectronic device. That failure happened during a pre-launch systems check. It's failure mode was unique and will never be seen again. I built and qualified microelectronic used in NASA space programs for 10 years. All of the projects of the 80s and early 90s contain parts I work with. Level S ICs are very different from the stuff you buy at Radio Shack!

  36. What next? by ISPTech · · Score: 1

    Feb 2001 conversation:
    Re: NASA & John Hopkins joint operation...or Dude, Where's my sattelite

    Dude1: Ok we're done with NEAR.
    Dude2: Dude, I want to land this thing on Eros.
    Dude1: That won't be easy...but why not?
    Dude2: Dude!
    Dude1: Sweet!

    *Fast Forward to May 2002*
    Dude2: I'm bored.
    Dude1: What now?
    Dude2: Not much...no cash. Dude, I guess we could launch NEAR off EROS again.
    Dude1: Sweet!

    --
    This space intentionally left blank.
  37. Curious... by ShadowDawn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    On our probes and satellites that we send out to deep space, do we stamp anywhere that has our co-ordinates of Earth?

    I would hate to think that we would have a dead probe sitting on a asteroid then another intelligent life form discovers it light years away without any real information of who and where we are.

    Seems to me with our thirst of "Is anything out there?" We would do something like this.

    Then again.....It might be the borg and may be better.

    1. Re:Curious... by mikerich · · Score: 2, Insightful
      AFAIK, only the Pioneer 10/11 and Voyager 1/2 probes have that information as they were intended to leave the Solar System.

      There is an explanation of the Pioneer plaque (and it is a work of genius) at: http://www-pw.physics.uiowa.edu/pioneer/other/plaq ue.gif

      Best wishes,
      Mike.

    2. Re:Curious... by jaoswald · · Score: 1

      The asteroid is in solar orbit, and isn't going to leave the solar system.

    3. Re:Curious... by belg4mit · · Score: 1

      mu

      --
      Were that I say, pancakes?
  38. other issues by MenTaLguY · · Score: 2

    Electromigration of dopants in semiconductors are another factor.

    Also, dissimilar metals being in contact over very long periods of time can have interesting interactions (they had to address such problems when renovating the Statue of Liberty, as the iron framework was reacting with the copper skin).

    --

    DNA just wants to be free...
  39. Battery power by 00_NOP · · Score: 1

    How long can silent electronics last in space?

    If it's an IBM Li-Ion battery, about 15 minutes.

  40. Toki Pona word for "crazy" is "nasa" by yerricde · · Score: 1

    but NASA isn't known for crazy things like that.

    In the Toki Pona language, the word for "crazy" is nasa.

    Other pages linking "NASA" to "crazy"

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  41. NEAR is still there? by sharkey · · Score: 2

    You mean, there AREN'T any buggers on Eros?

    --

    --
    "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    1. Re:NEAR is still there? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not yet. Remember, the first sign of impending invasion is that Eros goes dark :)

  42. Maybe NASA's parking and storage lease is up? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe they just plan to move the probe from space 29 in Orbital Development's parking and storage facility to avoid any late fees (see their website).

  43. Same old sh*t, different day by puckhead · · Score: 1

    Maybe once it was on the ground it just didn't have anything new to send after a while.

    Day 0: Cold
    Day 1: Cold
    Day 2: Cold
    ...

    --
    Watching Cowboy Bebop in my jammies, eating a bowl of Shreddies.
    1. Re:Same old sh*t, different day by AndroidCat · · Score: 1

      Day 0: Cold
      Day 1: Cold
      Day 2: Cold
      Day 3: Fuck it's cold. I'm going out, I may be some time.

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    2. Re:Same old sh*t, different day by Royster · · Score: 1

      I'm going out, I may be some time.

      Ohhh! A reference to the Scott Expedition to the South Pole. Who said that, Oates?

      --
      I have discovered a truly marvelous sig, unfortunately the sig limit is too small to contain i
  44. Absolutely... by punkass · · Score: 1

    ..classic...

    --
    "Nobody owns the fucking words man." - James Dean
  45. I think we all know what will happen... by smoondog · · Score: 2, Funny

    I think we all know what will happen when they make contact:

    NASA Operator: What happen?
    NASA Operator 2: Somebody set us up the bomb
    NASA Operator: We Get Signal!
    NASA Operator 2: What?
    NASA Operator: Main Screen Turn On.
    NASA Operator 2: Its you!
    NEAR Probe: How are you gentlemen?
    NEAR Probe: All your base are belong to us.

    (cheezy techno starts now...)
    -Sean

  46. Ressurecting is NEAR! by WetCat · · Score: 1

    HE is coming to us!

  47. NEAR Resurrection Cancelled by Unclaimed+Mysteries · · Score: 1

    due to presence of A/D converters in spacecraft; Analog Hole in Solar System declared "plugged"; Other craft such as Pioneer to be shut down

    --
    -- It Came from C. L. Smith's Unclaimed Mysteries.
  48. ive already made contact with NEAR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NEAR doesnt want to talk to NASA

  49. moon shadow? by Tablizer · · Score: 2

    On this page cited by "Cally":

    http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/alsj/a 12 / s12-48-7133.jpg

    (remove any spaces from URL)

    I noticed that the lighting looks strange. It looks like the lander in the distance is under a cloud shadow or dust shadow. Obviously there are no clouds on the moon, so dust is the next best candidate. However, that is a lot of dust to stay suspended for several minutes when there is no atmosphere.