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
Contact: Diane Ainsworth
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEMarch 14, 1997
MARS PATHFINDER PASSES GLOBAL SURVEYOR ON ITS WAY TO MARS
Like two ships passing in the night,
NASA's Mars Pathfinder spacecraft will begin to overtake Mars Global Surveyor
tonight, moving closer to Mars than its companion orbiter and closing in
for the final four-month approach to the red planet.
Mars Pathfinder, a lander carrying a
small rover and science instruments to Mars, has less than half of its total
distance to complete now, said Dr. Robin Vaughan, Pathfinder navigation
team member at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The spacecraft will overtake
Mars Global Surveyor at 0100 Universal Time on March 15 (5 p.m. Pacific
Standard Time tonight, March 14).
At the time of the event, Mars Pathfinder
will be 43.7 million kilometers (27 million miles) from Earth and 69.7 million
kilometers (43.2 million miles) from Mars. The spacecraft is more than halfway
along its arcing flight path, on which it will have traveled a total of
497 million kilometers (309 million miles) by the time it reaches Mars.
"Although Pathfinder was launched
about a month after Mars Global Surveyor, it is traveling faster than Surveyor
and is on a shorter flight path to the red planet," said Brian Muirhead,
Pathfinder project manager at JPL. "Whereas Mars Global Surveyor will
take 10 months to reach Mars, Pathfinder takes only seven months. Once we
reach Mars, we dive directly into the Martian atmosphere. The descent will
only take about four minutes, and we should be on the surface of Mars by
about 10 a.m. Pacific time on July 4th."
Pathfinder is on a different type of
trajectory to Mars than Mars Global Surveyor. Called a "Type 1"
trajectory, the spacecraft does not have to travel as far to intercept Mars.
Mars Global Surveyor will log a total of 700 million kilometers (435 million
miles) in its flight path toward the red planet.
"The advantage to using a Type
1 trajectory is that you have to travel less than one-half of the way around
the Sun to intercept Mars," Vaughan said. "So Pathfinder takes
212 days to reach Mars, while Mars Global Surveyor will spend 309 days to
reach the planet."
Mars Global Surveyor is on a "Type
2" trajectory, taking it more than 180 degrees around the Sun to intercept
the planet. A major difference in this type of trajectory is that the spacecraft
travels at a slower velocity with respect to the Sun. Subsequently, the
craft requires less fuel to slow down at Mars than if it had followed Pathfinder's
trajectory. For instance, Pathfinder is currently traveling at 27 kilometers
per second (60,700 miles per hour), while Mars Global Surveyor is traveling
at about 26.75 kilometers per second (59,800 miles per hour).
"Less fuel translates into simpler,
smaller spacecraft and less expense," said Glenn Cunningham, Mars Global
Surveyor project manager. "Mars Global Surveyor also will employ a
fairly new technique requiring very little fuel to drop down into its mapping
orbit. The technique is called 'aerobraking,' and takes advantage of the
drag of the Martian atmosphere. As the spacecraft dips down into the top
of the atmosphere at its closest point to the planet each orbit, the drag
from the atmosphere on the spacecraft will reduce its orbital speed. This
drops the altitude of the highest part of the orbit, changing it from the
initial elliptical shape to the circular shape required for mapping the
planet."
Aerobraking was first demonstrated successfully
with the Magellan spacecraft, which mapped the surface of cloud-covered
Venus using a sophisticated radar-imaging system. Magellan aerobraked into
the Venusian atmosphere in October 1994, sending back data about Venus'
thick sulfur and carbon dioxide-choked atmosphere until it burned up in
the planet's sizzling temperatures. Mars Global Surveyor, however, will
not dip so far into the much thinner Martian atmosphere that it would burn
up.
Pathfinder is scheduled to perform two
more flight path corrections and, possibly, a fifth maneuver to keep it
on course for landing on Mars on July 4. The last two maneuvers will occur
near the end of the cruise phase, on May 7 and June 24, when the spacecraft
is close to Mars. If necessary, a fifth maneuver will be executed just a
few hours before entry into the Martian atmosphere on July 4. Mars Global
Surveyor will perform its second trajectory correction maneuver on March
20. Engineers are continuing to explore possible ways of freeing a broken
damper arm that is wedged in the joint of one of the solar arrays, so that
the panel locks in place.
The Mars Pathfinder and Mars Global
Surveyor missions are managed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory for NASA's
Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C. Pathfinder is the second in NASA's
Discovery program of low-cost spacecraft designed to carry out highly focused
science goals. Mars Global Surveyor is the first spacecraft in a decade-long
program of robotic exploration, called the Mars Surveyor Program.
3/13/97 DEA
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