PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
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http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Mars Pathfinder Mission Status
December 18, 1996
Sojourner, a 10-kilogram (22-pound) rover tucked away on a
petal of the Mars Pathfinder spacecraft, got a 'wake up' call on
Dec. 17 from flight controllers at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory. After waking up, Sojourner conducted an internal
health check and sent data back to the flight team that all was
well.
The Pathfinder flight team was ecstatic with the rover data,
which showed that all systems within the rover were operating
normally. In addition, data from the rover's main science
instrument -- the alpha proton x-ray spectrometer -- showed that
it was operting properly.
"The rover woke up, did its internal health check, sent the
lander its status data and went back to sleep, all as planned,"
said Art Thompson, rover operations team member. "All subsystems
were verified as being in good health."
Pathfinder continues to perform very well on its 500
million-kilometer (310 million-mile) journey to Mars, the team
reported. Currently the spacecraft is 4 million kilometers (2.5
million miles) from Earth, traveling at a speed of 3.1 kilometers
per second (7,000 miles per hour). Its destination, Mars, is
currently about 190 million kilometers (118 million miles) away.
All temperatures and power utilization of the lander and cruise
stage remain at their predicted levels for this phase of the
mission.
The spacecraft was spun down from 12.3 rpm to 2 rpm on
Dec. 11. Flight controllers first instructed the spacecraft to
turn to a Sun angle of 50 degrees and an Earth angle of 32
degrees. This allowed them to use all four operating Sun sensors.
The spacecraft executed the commanded spin down to the normal
cruise spin rate of 2 rpm in steps of 2 rpm at a time.
Once the normal spin rate was established, the team turned
on the spacecraft's star scanner on Dec. 12. Star scanner
data allows the spacecraft to establish full, three-axis
knowledge of its orientation in space. This is the normal cruise
attitude control mode and the one in which all trajectory
correction maneuvers will be performed.
While Sun sensor #5 continues to work well after a software
fix, the flight team continues to investigate the cause of the
loss of Sun sensor head #4. The team expects to reach a likely
conclusion on the cause of the problem within the next month or
two.
Dave Gruel, Pathfinder flight director at JPL, conducted the
Dec.16 health check of the lander science instruments, including
the atmospheric sensor instrument and meteorology (ASI/MET)
package and the imager. Temperature, pressure and accelerometer
readings from the atmospheric/meteorology instrument verified it
was in normal working order. Power and dark current measurements
received from the imager while it was imaging the darkness around
it, confirmed that the instrument was working properly, Gruel
said.
Richard Cook, Pathfinder mission operations manager at JPL,
reported today that Pathfinder has been fully checked out for
this phase of the mission and that all subsystems are "go" for a
successful seven-month cruise to Mars.
The next major in-flight event will be Pathfinder's first
trajectory correction maneuver, which is scheduled for Jan. 4,
1997.
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