MARS PATHFINDER MISSION STATUS
December 4, 1996
10:30 a.m. Pacific Standard Time
NASA's Mars Pathfinder is reported to be performing well on the first
day of a seven-month journey to the red planet following a perfect launch
today from Cape Canaveral, FL at 1:58 a.m. Eastern time.
"The spacecraft team was ecstatic at seeing good spacecraft data,"
said Brian Muirhead, Pathfinder Deputy Project Manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory. "The command and data telecommunications subsystems are
working perfectly, sending down data at 1,183 bits per second. The temperature
control and propulsion subsystems reported all temperatures and pressures
are within expected ranges. All systems are healthy," he said. Pathfinder
is traveling away from Earth at a speed of 3.9 kilometers (2.4 miles) per
second.
The Delta II launch vehicle performed flawlessly, placing the spacecraft
on its trajectory to Mars well within acceptable limits. NASA's Deep Space
Network acquired the spacecraft telemetry signal on schedule, about five
minutes after separation of the Delta's third stage. When Pathfinder came
out of Earth's shadow at one hour and 38 minutes after launch, the solar
arrays took over powering the spacecraft as planned. "Power from the
array looks to be about 10% better than initially predicted," said
Muirhead.
Pathfinder engineers continue to analyze data from the spacecraft's sun
sensor, an instrument that helps the spacecraft determine its orientation
with respect to the Sun. "The sensor's voltage output is below expected
levels but it does appear to be giving good data," said Muirhead. Navigation
data and the sun sensor data agree and show the spacecraft to be properly
oriented, spinning at the expected 12 rpm and pointed 26 degrees off the
Sun. Later today, Muirhead said the spacecraft will be commanded to switch
to a redundant sensor head to see if it is also performing at a low voltage.
"Should the problem persist, we have a number of workaround options
and there is no risk to the continuation of the mission."
Carried inside the cone-shaped spacecraft is Sojourner, the small robotic
rover that will roll out to traverse the surface of Mars when the spacecraft
makes its Martian landing on July 4, 1997. It will be the first spacecraft
to land on Mars since NASA's Viking mission soft-landed two spacecraft there
in 1976. Pathfinder is the second mission in NASA's Discovery program, which
is designed to send low-cost spacecraft with highly focused mission objectives
to explore space.
Provided courtesy of:
PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
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