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)"
About Galileo, some tales from several years ago, mentioning the current tape problem.
:)
I would like to hear what exactly the engineers did. I have a feeling it was the interplanetary version of whacking your TV set to stop the whine.
Not all twiddle-the-computer exercises work out well. NASA is not one to dwell on failure, but they'll hand-deliver a press release to your door for great news. E.g., I read that contact with one of the Viking landers was lost years ago after someone sent bad data to its antenna tracking system. The lander was very late in its lifespan, but would you like to have been the guy who did it? We've found reasons to keep in touch with even the Voyagers (or should I say V'gers?), as well as the nearly 4x too old Galileo.
The Web is so cool: Galileo's current position
And Galileo tour guide -- the Galileo stuff at the NASA site is a little dusty.
Should we have a moment of silence with spunky Galileo burns up? Do you think the Jovians will retaliate?
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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