Mars Rover Spirit Recovers From Steering Glitch
jangobongo writes "Spirit's steering glitch apparently cleared up on its own and engineers are still trying to understand what caused it. Meanwhile, the rover Opportunity found a cracked rock that may provide evidence of a second water event in the red planet's past."
My understanding is that many contractor payments depend on the "warrentee" periods. If the rovers failed before that time and a particular contractor was related to the part of failure, then they don't get paid as much. I don't know the specific legalese of it all, though. It would make an interesting article if somebody could find the scoop.
Further, many of the parts were only tested under the 90-day assumption. For example, they may test thermal cycling on a circuit board 90 times to simulate 90 Martian days.
But one should also point out that the rovers are showing aches and pains. Spirit has a bum front wheel that requires excess power to run. Sometimes they turn it off and run the rover backward to avoid wearing it further. Opportunity seems to be having cable glitches due to worn cables from all the rocks it has drilled and imaged up close, and both rovers seem to have dust doors on instruments that seem to sometimes stick. Thus, it has not been exactly roses as far as the equipment is concerned.
Almost every other week I read about some new glitch that stumps engineers for a few days, sometimes halting science work. So far they have found workarounds, but the luck cannot last forever.
Table-ized A.I.
What's even more amazing, I think, is that all the science and remote sensing instruments are still working fine!! The stuck heater glitch in Opportunity forced engineers to put it into "deep sleep" during winter months to prevent completely draining the batteries overnight but this has the unwanted consequence of also turning off all heaters in the warm electronics box. And the box, which also contains optics for the Mini-Thermal Emission Spectrometer was long ago expected to fall to >-60C overnight, shrinking an aluminum housing holding a crystal optic of potassium bromide (transparent to all IR light) enough to crack and destroy it...never happened though! Also, the microgrinding tool used to make boreholes in rock has worn much less than expected and the moessbauer spectrometers and microscopic cameras are still working perfectly after some concerns that one of thier plastic ribbon data cables might have been cracked while flexing during movement due to the extreme cold of martian winter. Amazing.
- "Hear that?! The percolations are imminent! Cease your ingress!"