[meteorite-list] Spirit Gets Energy Boost from Cleaner Solar Panels

From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu, 12 Feb 2009 16:07:28 -0800 (PST)
Message-ID: <200902130007.QAA26120_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov>

http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2009-020a

Spirit Gets Energy Boost from Cleaner Solar Panels
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
February 12, 2009

Mars Exploration Rover Mission Status Report

A small but important uptick in electrical output from the solar panels
on NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit this month indicates a
beneficial Martian wind has blown away some of the dust that has
accumulated on the panels.

The cleaning boosts Spirit's daily energy supply by about 30 watt-hours,
to about 240 watt-hours from 210 watt-hours. The rover uses about 180
watt-hours per day for basic survival and communications, so this
increase roughly doubles the amount of discretionary power for
activities such as driving and using instruments. Thirty watt-hours is
the amount of energy used to light a 30-watt bulb for one hour.

"We will be able to use this energy to do significantly more driving,"
said Colette Lohr, a rover mission manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "Our drives have been averaging about 50
minutes, and energy has usually been the limiting factor. We may be able
to increase that to drives of an hour and a half."

Spirit has driven about 9 meters (about 30 feet) since getting around a
rock that temporarily blocked its progress on Jan. 31. The team's goal
in coming weeks is to navigate the rover over or around a low plateau
called "Home Plate" to get to an area targeted for scientific studies on
the other side of Home Plate.

JPL's Jennifer Herman, a rover team engineer, found the first evidence
for the new cleaning event in engineering data from the Martian day
1,812 of Spirit's mission on the Red Planet (Feb. 6, 2009) and confirmed
it from the following two days' data. Before the event, dust buildup on
the solar array had reached the point where only 25 percent of sunlight
hitting the array was getting past the dust to be used by the
photovoltaic cells. Afterwards, that increased to 28 percent.

"It may not sound like a lot, but it is an important increase," Herman
said.

The last prior cleaning event that was as beneficial as this one was in
June 2007. Winds cleaned off more of the dust that time, but a dust
storm in subsequent weeks undid much of the benefit.

Spirit's twin rover, Opportunity, drove 135.9 meters (446 feet) on Feb.
10. Opportunity's cumulative odometry is 14.36 kilometers (8.92 miles)
since landing in January 2004, including 2.58 kilometers (1.6 miles)
since climbing out of Victoria Crater on Aug. 28, 2008.

Spirit and Opportunity have been operating on Mars for more than five
years in exploration missions originally planned to last for three
months. JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in
Pasadena, manages the Mars Exploration Rover project for NASA's Science
Mission Directorate, Washington.

Media contact: Guy Webster 818-354-6278
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Guy.Webster at jpl.nasa.gov

2009-020
Received on Thu 12 Feb 2009 07:07:28 PM PST


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