NEAR Mission News                           

Dec. 12, 2002

http://near.jhuapl.edu

NEAR Shoemaker's Silent Treatment

Even though the NEAR Shoemaker spacecraft had exceeded every mission
expectation, the NEAR team asked for one more spectacular addition to 
the mission's legacy: Talk to us one more time.

But NEAR Shoemaker - the first spacecraft to orbit, land on and send 
data from the surface of an asteroid - kept mum despite a 12-hour effort to
communicate with it.

"The exercise was an experiment to see how robust the spacecraft and 
its instrumentation and subsystems were given the extremely cold 
temperature it has been in for nearly two years," says NEAR Mission 
Director Robert Farquhar. "We didn't hold out much hope but we had an 
opportunity to establish an important data point and didn't want to lose 
the chance."

The attempt was initiated at 2:40 p.m. EST, Tuesday, Dec. 10, by the 
NEAR mission operations team at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics
Laboratory, which managed the mission and built the spacecraft, and the 
Deep Space Network team, which supported the effort through their 70-meter
Goldstone antenna. With asteroid Eros only about 86 million miles (138
million kilometers) from Earth - less than half the distance it was 
when NEAR Shoemaker landed on it in February 2001 - and NEAR Shoemaker's 
solar panels basking in sunlight for the past three months, the timing was 
ideal.

First, operators listened passively for a carrier signal from the
spacecraft. Then they sent commands asking NEAR Shoemaker to transmit 
data indicating it had survived the last 22 months on the asteroid's 
surface, despite temperatures that dipped as low as minus 170 degrees Celsius 
(-274 degrees Fahrenheit) and long periods of total darkness.

Not knowing which of NEAR Shoemaker's two computers had access to its
transmitter, mission operators tried sending commands to one, then the
other. Then they waited - in vain - to receive data.

Farquhar says the team will probably never know precisely why NEAR 
Shoemaker did not respond and they do not expect to try again.

The first in NASA's Discovery Program of low-cost, scientifically 
focused planetary missions, NEAR conducted a yearlong orbit study of asteroid 
433 Eros. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in 
Laurel, Md., designed and built the NEAR Shoemaker spacecraft and managed the 
NEAR mission for NASA. For more information and images visit the NEAR Web 
site at 

http://near.jhuapl.edu. 

For more on NASA's Discovery Program visit

http://discovery.nasa.gov.



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