Hi Lou,

When you're going into eclipse without a battery, what difference would it make 
if you could?  :-)

But, this post is about a different question...  As the spacecraft tumbles in 
direct sunlight, I understand that there are some orientations it might tumble 
through that result in not quite enough power to run everything.  First, is 
that correct?  And, if so, what choices can the IHU make in terms of lightening 
the load on the solar panels?  I presume the tumble would be slow enough that 
you could see the power dip coming...  Can the various downlink components, the 
university experiment, etc. be independently shut down?

Greg  KO6TH


> From: [email protected]
> Date: Sat, 27 Aug 2011 17:14:37 -0400
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: AMSAT-BB Digest, Vol 6, Issue 492
> 
> If the ARISSat-1 satellite goes into eclipse, and the battery has failed, the 
> software doesn't get to decide when to shut down. The lights are out with no 
> power.
> 

                                          
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