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Spirit Rover is One Year Old

dolphin558 writes "The little rover that could, did. The Spirit Rover marks its one year aniversary after an expected lifetime of just 3 months. It has traversed more than 2 miles of Martian landscape and sent back thousands of pictures and reams of data. There is no indication that it will die anytime soon as it climbs the Columbia Hills."

3 of 347 comments (clear)

  1. Only one *Earth* year by saddino · · Score: 5, Informative

    But given that it's on Mars (686.98 Earth days to complete one solar revolution), its actual Martian anniversary will come November 19th, 2005.

  2. Re:E(X) = 3 months... really? by matt_martin · · Score: 5, Informative

    Its just the way engineering for reliability works.
    To GUARANTEE with any certainty that something will last for 3 months, you have to build it with a much longer expected lifetime. You'll probably get "lucky" and it will work much longer (10x is not unrealistic).

    FWIW: Thats hypothetically why they can push the Enterprise to 110% and not instantly explode ...

    --
    Lurking in the desert
  3. Re:Tires? - Moderate to non-factual? by Neurowiz · · Score: 5, Informative

    This post should be moderated non-factual.

    The solar panels are not "degrading" as much as their ability to collect solar energy is being limited by dust covering them and the winter season. Now that Martian winter is over for both Rovers, they are going to see increased power. Interestingly, and noted elsewhere, Opportunity is seeing up to "landing day" power levels, due perhaps to some Martian dust devils "cleaning" the panels.

    JPL instituted energy conservation measures - no instruments were permanently "shut down" - all of the instruments on both MERs are functioning. Opportunity is put into a "Deep Sleep" which does temporarily shut off all instrumentation, but they are brought back online. This was done not for the winterization of the rovers, but in answer to a problem Opportunity had with one of it's heaters for an instrument.

    The confusion in this post with Voyager/Pioneer has already been noted.

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    Neurowiz