Thursday, March 5, 2009

Flight Team to Check Status of Backup System

Mars Odyssey Mission Status Report

The team operating NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter plans a procedure next week to address a long-known, potential vulnerability of accumulated memory corruption.

The procedure requires rebooting the spacecraft's computer. This is not a risk-free event, but the Odyssey team and NASA have carefully weighed the risks of performing a cold reboot compared with the risk of doing nothing, and determined that the proper course of action is to proceed with the reboot.

The chief concern about the potential memory vulnerability stems from the length of time that the spacecraft has been exposed to the accumulated effects of the space radiation environment since the last reboot, which occurred on Oct. 31, 2003.

As an additional benefit, the cold-reboot procedure will demonstrate whether Odyssey's onboard backup systems will be available should they ever be required.

"We have lost no functionality, but there would be advantages to knowing whether the B side is available," said Odyssey Mission Manager Gaylon McSmith of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "We have developed a careful plan for attempting to determine that."

In all the years since its April 7, 2001, launch, Odyssey has not needed to use its set of spare components. The spares are called the spacecraft's "B side," which includes an identical set of a computer processor, navigation sensors, relay radio and other subsystems. To use any of them, Odyssey would have to shift to all of them at once from its primary set of components, called the "A side."

On March 21, 2007, the B-side spare of an electronic component for managing the distribution of power, called the high-efficiency power supply, became inoperable. If it is permanently disabled, then none of the B side is available for use. Engineers have investigated the inoperability of the B-side high-efficiency power supply. They concluded that the component can probably be made to work properly again by rebooting the orbiter's computer, although the memory-vulnerability issue that is the current concern is not directly related to the March 2007 event that affected the power supply.

Odyssey is in the third two-year extension of its mission at Mars. Some A-side components, such as the UHF radio used for communications with spacecraft on the surface of Mars, have worked as long as they were designed to last.

In addition to its own major scientific discoveries and continuing studies of the planet, the Odyssey mission has played important roles in supporting the missions of the Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity and the Phoenix Mars Lander.

JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, manages Mars Odyssey for the NASA Science Mission Directorate, Washington. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, is the prime contractor for the project and built the spacecraft. Additional information about Odyssey is at http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/odyssey.


0 comments to "Flight Team to Check Status of Backup System"

RSS Feeds

 

Send me hate/love letters

(Click This Gift Box To Get Your Site/Blog Listed Here)

Horror Of The Day

Magic Show

Magic Show

Stylish Walk

My Friend's Blogroll

Non-Believers Giving Aid

The Out Campaign

The Out Campaign: Scarlet Letter of Atheism

Blog Archive

Dancing Tweety

Dancing Tweety

NASA International Space Station

NASA International Space Station

NASA Solar System

NASA Solar System

NASA/JPL-Caltech

NASA/JPL-Caltech

NASA Voyager 2 Launch

NASA Voyager 2 Launch

NASA Flight Over Venus

NASA Flight Over Venus

NASA's Sombrero Galaxy in Infrared

NASA's Sombrero Galaxy in Infrared

NASA Hubble Telescope

NASA  Hubble Telescope

NASA Mars Exploration Rover

NASA Mars Exploration Rover

NASA Shooting For The Moon

NASA Shooting For The Moon

NASA STS-132 Lifts Off

NASA STS-132 Lifts Off

NASA Expedition 21 Lifts Off

NASA Expedition 21 Lifts Off

NASA The Birth Of Stars

NASA The Birth Of Stars

NASA Ring Of Fire

NASA Ring Of Fire

NASA Expedition 22 Crew Lands

NASA Expedition 22 Crew Lands

NASA Huygens on Titan

NASA Huygens on Titan

NASA Expedition 23 Soyuz Rollout

NASA Expedition 23 Soyuz Rollout

NASA Launch Pad 39A

NASA Launch Pad 39A

NASA Mission to Jupiter

NASA Mission to Jupiter

NASA WISE

NASA WISE

NASA Glint in the Cat's Eye

NASA Glint in the Cat's Eye

NASA Saturn's Auroras

NASA Saturn's Auroras

NASA Phoenix Twilight

NASA Phoenix Twilight

NASA Phoenix

NASA Phoenix

NASA Cosmic Pearls

NASA Cosmic Pearls

NASA Gemini 5 Launch

NASA Gemini 5 Launch

NASA Mercury Space Capsule

NASA Mercury Space Capsule

NASA Cassini Spacecraft

NASA Cassini Spacecraft

NASA Space Shuttle

NASA Space Shuttle

NASA Europa Explorer

NASA Europa Explorer

NASA The First Docking in Space

NASA The First Docking in Space