http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/status.html

SPIRIT UPDATE: Rat Bears Down on "Brooklyn" - sol 84, Mar 30, 2004

The angular nature of the rock called "Mazatzal" required some 
extra rodent power over the weekend. The latest grind by Spirit's 
rock abrasion tool (the RAT) resulted in the deepest human-made 
hole on another planet - nearly 8 millimeters (0.31 inches. The 
rover was inspired to tackle the target "Brooklyn" right next
to its "New York" bull's-eye by the Beastie Boys' "No Sleep Till 
Brooklyn" on its 83rd sol, which ended at 12:22 p.m. PST on March 28. 

Spirit's 84th sol, which ended at 1:01 p.m. PST on March 29, was 
planned as a day of investigation. The miniature thermal emission 
spectrometer and panoramic camera made successful observations of 
the crater informally named "Bonneville," but planned operations of 
the rover arm were not executed due to a switch on the Moessbauer 
spectrometer getting momentarily stuck. After a successful 
Moessbauer integration, the instrument was pulled back from 
Mazatzal, but one of two contact switches did not indicate a 
no-contact condition. Although the instrument had been retracted, 
the rover's software interpreted this as an unexpected collision 
of the spectrometer with an object, so it terminated any further 
arm operations. The stuck switch flipped about three minutes later 
but the rover is programmed to wait until the false error is
cleared by mission control. 

On sol 85, Spirit will retake microscope images of areas on Mazatzal, 
and overnight Moessbauer and alpha particle X-ray spectrometer 
integrations will be repeated.



OPPORTUNITY UPDATE: Opportunity Takes a Breather - sol 64, Mar 30, 2004

On Opportunity's 64th sol, which ended at 1:22 a.m. PST on March 30, 
the rover team analyzed the results of engineering activities run to 
investigate an error message they received from the rover on sol 63.

A problem with a secondary memory file was isolated and resolved. 
Just as an ordinary computer disk can have corrupted sections, a 
corrupted file in an area where rover commands are addressed and 
stored has been identified. Engineers have identified the location 
of the problem within the memory and figuratively fenced it off, 
containing it and preventing it from harming any future command 
sequences. This minor issue has not impeded the rover from resuming 
normal science operations on the next sol.

The wake-up song chosen for Opportunity on this quiet sol was "Stand" 
by REM.

The rover is currently at the rock dubbed "Bounce." Opportunity met 
this rock once before; while still cloaked in its protective lander 
and airbags, the rover bounced on the rock while on its way to a safe 
landing in "Eagle Crater." Miniature thermal emission spectrometer 
observations have shown Bounce is rich in hematite. In the coming sols, 
the rover's other spectrometers will examine the rock before the rock 
abrasion tool grinds into a designated target.

______________________________________________
Meteorite-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

Reply via email to