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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."

18 of 347 comments (clear)

  1. maintenance by confusion · · Score: 5, Funny
    It certainly helps when you have friendly Martians maintaining it.

    I'm glad to see that we've gotten our money's worth on this one.

    Jerry
    http://www.syslog.org/

    1. Re:maintenance by Iphtashu+Fitz · · Score: 4, Funny

      Reminds me of a tv commercial I saw a while ago. I forget what the product was for but the commercial showed a lone scientist sitting in front of a huge video monitor in a NASA-style control room. On the monitor was the rover. The scientest turned his head for a minute and when he looked back at the screen the rover was up on cinder blocks, it's wheels were gone, and it had been vandalized in one or two other ways. Finally, conclusive proof of intelligent(?) life on Mars!

  2. Great! Keep the Spacemen at Home by TychoCelchuuu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the spirit rover can last for a year on Mars, why do we need to send astronauts (naughts?)? Wouldn't the money be better spent on more robots?

    --
    Against stupidity the Gods themselves contend in vain.
    1. Re:Great! Keep the Spacemen at Home by danheskett · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This was a very basic attempt at a robot. If we redirected the money spent on manned space flight, the space station, and other human-based space flight projects into the robotic missions, you'd see some damn fine robots.

      We aimed very small with this mission. Yet we got big. Very big. What we really need is a coherent team of robots that work together to go to Mars. Overlapping functions, semi-autonomy, semi-intelligent bots that are able to function together for a common goal.

      Robots are the best future of NASA.

    2. Re:Great! Keep the Spacemen at Home by stienman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If the spirit rover can last for a year on Mars, why do we need to send astronauts (naughts?)? Wouldn't the money be better spent on more robots?

      The robots cannot make decisions on the fly, other than extremely simple obstacle avoidance. When a decision is to be made, the robot talks to us, we think about it, and then command the robot. This takes a huge amount of time.

      An astronaut can walk faster than these robots can move. Put a moon rovor type vehicle up there with a few astronauts and you can do as much exploration in a day as the Spirit and Opportunity have done their entire existance.

      Plus, we can, there are those who want to, and there are those willing to pay for it. Who are you to tell them to stop? So far this mission has cost you less than $10 of your taxes. I fully support the government using taxes to perform such missions, and apparently a majority of Americans feel similarily.

      -Adam

    3. Re:Great! Keep the Spacemen at Home by pthisis · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If the spirit rover can last for a year on Mars, why do we need to send astronauts (naughts?)?

      Not because it is easy, but because it is hard.

      --
      rage, rage against the dying of the light
    4. Re:Great! Keep the Spacemen at Home by danheskett · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Further, you cannot simply tell a robot to 'explore that rock over there' like you could a skilled human.
      You can't do that *now* with Spirit, but there is no reason you can't do that now with current robotic technology. There are numerous robots that function semi-autonomously with complex behaviours that could be modified for Mars. Additionally, *THERE IS NO RUSH*. If we build more durable robots for Mars we can take a few days to do what a human could do in a single day. So what? When the robot "dies", we just leave it. Shipping enough supplies for a 12-month round-trip through space for a human to consume is a monumentally expensive (time, weight, and design requirements) expenditure. Let's say we ship a human to Mars for a 60 day stay. That means we need to ship 14 months of life-support supplies for each human. That's a lot! How many backup robots, replacement parts, and redudant robots could we send for the same cost in dollars and weight?

      Even if we sent a team of 5 robots, more advanced than currently possible, they would still require about 30-50 people micromanaging the robots
      So what! Engineers on earth cost far less than astro-persons in Space! Give control to various robots to Univeristies around the world.

      Given one week they would still, as a group, complete less science than one astronaut would complete in a day.
      Let's say that's true. So, how long could a human stay on Mars? Two months at max? That's 60 man days. If we sent 12 various robots up, and all 12 robots can only do 1/7th the work of a human, we would by this point (landing plus one year), but far ahead of that one manned mission. Who knows how long we could design robots to last on Mars? Is there any reason we couldn't design a team of robots to function nominally for 5 years?

      Lastly, we can do it, there are people who want to do it, and there are those who want to finance it. Why should they be stopped? Who are you to tell them the best way to do what they want to do?
      For 100% private money, fine. But for government tax dollars the goal should be the most most valuable science for the least most safe dollars.

      If you are talking about preparing for future colonization, it won't be NASA doing it. Period. That is not their goal now, nor has it ever really been.

  3. Hmm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    This looks familiar. Oh wait, it was posted here earlier.

  4. 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.

    1. Re:Only one *Earth* year by dj245 · · Score: 4, Funny
      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.

      Its now a child of both planets, and just like the child of divorced parents, it has to celebrate all the holidays everywhere.

      --
      Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
  5. Re:Always focusing on one... by slungsolow · · Score: 4, Informative

    Opportunities birthday is in 21 days (Jan 24).

  6. 9 months over your estimate? by Valar · · Score: 5, Funny

    Someone must be held accountable! In order to maintain the proud, bureaucratic tradition of post-apollo NASA we must fire the engineers responsible. Do you have any idea how many man hours have been wasted trying to operate a rover that should have been dead months ago?

  7. 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
  8. Beats the shit out of my Mitsubishi Galant by gelfling · · Score: 4, Funny

    In terms of years operating and miles run. Whatever these people did, we need to bottle it, pronto.

  9. 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.

    --
    Neurowiz
  10. One-way trips? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Let's say we ship a human to Mars for a 60 day stay. That means we need to ship 14 months of life-support supplies for each human.

    I wonder how much actual training an explorer on Mars would need. What if there was an average Joe who had an inoperable brain tumor or something that was going to kill him in a year's time, but he was otherwise healthy. What if he was a total space geek and would like nothing more than to explore Mars or perhaps build settlements in his final days?

    I don't think the US population would be OK with the idea right away, but I also can't put my finger on a specific moral problem.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  11. Accounting still favors robots over humans by Tablizer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The robots cannot make decisions on the fly, other than extremely simple obstacle avoidance.

    For the same cost as astronauts, we can have 20 or more robots with higher bandwidth at 20 different locations. And, they can stay there a long time, unlike astronauts (unless we build a very expensive base). The Tortus wins this race in the end.

    An astronaut can walk faster than these robots can move.

    20 robots over 4 years are going to do more science than a couple of humans can in a month. And, cover a wider variety of territory.

    a few astronauts and you can do as much exploration in a day as the Spirit and Opportunity have done their entire existance.

    I don't know about that. Some of those spectrometer readings take several hours to perform even if a human is there. With more money, some of that would happen a lot faster. But power on Mars is going to cost money regardless of whether it is produced for humans or robots.

    Further, the rover operators have been very cautious. If they were less cautious, then more can happen in a day. We just may have to live with losing say 3 out of 20 robots to "go for it".

    What would really be helpful is sample returns enabled by robots. The problem is the potential biological contamination. But this issue if faced by both scenarios.

    And, Spirit and Opportunity are still mostly low-end robots. With more funding, fancier ones can be built, and still be much cheaper than humans. Here is a summary of ways to beef them up:

    * More bandwidth to Earth
    * More power (either bigger panels or "nuke" packs)
    * More instruments
    * Take more risk
    * Improve auto-guidence (more R&D)
    * Sample returns
    * Multiple "arms"

    I am sorry, but the accounting favors robots. They can cover more territory per dollar.

  12. Overengineered or Lucky by RosenSama · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So when the specs say 3 months and it lasts 1 year, are we just getting lucky on MTBF? Is it that anything designed to reliably travel all the way to Mars and then run unmaintained for 3 months has just got a good chance of quadrupling the design lifetime? Or are we wasting money and resources overengineering things way past spec because we had the budget to do so?