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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."

4 of 25 comments (clear)

  1. The wrong side of the planet. by eibhear · · Score: 4, Funny

    "...are still trying to understand what caused it"

    I suspect that Spirit stopped at a light on the wrong side of the planet and it went green while the locals were replacing those wheels with blocks.

    Mind you, NASA's never going to admit that...

    Éibhear

  2. Padding the numbers by mdp1173 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I don't think it was a case of overly padding their estimates, but some condervative assumptions turned out to be way off.

    Originally, they thought dusk accumulation on the solar panels would be a much larger problem. They estimated that the panels would be sufficiently covered to not produce enough juice about 100 days in. It turns out, the panels just aren't getting all that dirty and the terrain is hilly enough that you can park the rover on a North-facing slope to increase power.

    As for the other components, they spend so much time making them small and light that they invariabley are forced to use high quality components that go way past their L10 (the time at which 10% of a lot of parts will fail)

    Overall, it's probably more good luck and proper planning than a tin-foil hat consipriacy to make NASA look good

  3. I love these plucky little guys by hey! · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If anything, I think we should consider ramping up the rate and diversity of robotic planetary missions, rather than attempting a complex, dangerous manned mission with insufficient funding.

    For one thing, we've already done a manned planetary mission -- to the Moon. There's more opportunities for useful new technological spinoffs in the robotic arena.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  4. Re:Overstaying their welcome by Tablizer · · Score: 4, Informative

    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.