[meteorite-list] Mars Exploration Rover Update - September 30, 2004
From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri Oct 1 13:10:38 2004 Message-ID: <200410011710.KAA12899_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov> http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/status.html OPPORTUNITY UPDATE: Waking up from a Winter's Nap - sol 238-241, September 30, 2004 After a well-deserved rest through solar conjunction, Opportunity is awake again and back to work. The conjunction was the period in mid-September when Mars was nearly behind the Sun from Earth's perspective, causing communications to be unreliable. Sol details: Sol 238 Opportunity completed instrument arm operations on a soil target called "Auk" by finishing a multi-sol M?ssbauer spectrometer integration and collecting microscopic images of undisturbed soil. It then performing remote sensing observations on the next target, a rock called "Ellesmere." Once the morning activities were complete, Opportunity took a 90-minute nap then stowed the arm and drove backwards 0.34 meters (1.1 feet). The rover used an afternoon communications session on sol 238 and an early morning session on sol 239. Sols 239 and 240 The planning session for sols 239 and 240 was extremely challenging for the uplink team. As the rover project transitions to five-day-a-week planning, the Opportunity team planned two sols of activities to be uplinked on sol 239. Adding to the complexity, the two sols' activities included difficult instrument arm placement activities. Rover planners rose to the occasion. The sol started with 45 minutes of microscopic imaging, then placement of the alpha particle X-ray spectrometer on a target area of Ellesmere called "No Coating." Opportunity performed a couple hours of remote sensing, used an afternoon communications session and then went into overnight deep sleep. On sol 240, Opportunity began taking a reading with the alpha particle X-ray spectrometer at 7:00 local solar time, then went back to sleep. After waking, it did an hour of remote sensing observations, completed the alpha particle X-ray spectrometer integration and collected more microscopic imager pictures. The rover then placed the alpha particle X-ray spectrometer on its next target, "Barbeau." Another hour of remote sensing completed the sol. Sol 241 Opportunity finished its alpha particle X-ray spectrometer integration on Barbeau, collected more microscopic images, switched tools to the M?ssbauer spectrometer and started that integration. The rover performed a mini deep sleep overnight. Sol 241 ended on Sept. 27. Total odometry after sol 241 is 1,573.83 meters (0.98 miles - almost to the 1-mile mark). Received on Fri 01 Oct 2004 01:10:30 PM PDT |
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