NASA Fixes Galileo, Starts Recovering Data
linuxwrangler writes "After radiation damaged the recorders on Galileo it was feared that the data from the November flyby of Amalthea would be lost. Today NASA announced that they have repaired the recorder and are busy downloading the data. Meanwhile they also contacted pioneer 10 (64 bytes from pioneer10.nasa.gov: icmp_seq=1 ttl=255 time=80700000 ms)"
High energy protons had damaged an LED.
By running current through the LED for hours, they annealed it enough to get the job done.
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Here's some details about the fix. They isolated the problem to a bad LED, and ran current through it to melt away the damage... pretty cool.
There are 10 types of people in this world, those who can count in binary and those who can't.
somthing like this?
Oh, the five problems? The high-gain antenna didn't deploy. The tape in
the tape recorder tends to stick. The thrusters can explode if fired in
long steady burns, which is why Galileo always fires them in pulses, and
need to be burped regularly to avoid slow propellant decomposition --
TVSat 2 fortunately used the same thrusters, was launched before Galileo,
and had a solar array fail to deploy, so its thrusters were fired long and
hard during attempts to shake the array loose.
got it from the link in your parent's post. i'm assuming 5 is pioneer 5. i dunno for sure, though.
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