Spirit - Still Alive - volume 2 - Page 9

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Barsoomer


Posts: 344

Reply: 161



PostPosted: December 22, 2009 4:10 PM 

One thing that makes me hopeful is that the LF wheel is still eating into that dust pile. If it eventually gets through that, it should have some considerable traction.

Joe Smith


Posts: 86

Reply: 162



PostPosted: December 22, 2009 9:18 PM 

Yes Bardoomer,I think the over-all consensus is that we have at least gained back close to what we had lost.I read on another blog,that OVERALL we haven't sunken any lower.The RF,seems to be finding traction,even in what is in front of it

I think the on-going Mars climate plays a very large hand in what is going on with Spirit.
Soil changes:: equal,plus-minus sighs for 4
wheel drive traction.
For soil changes we have Horticolor.

Who knows,the RM wheel may reach (or already
reached) a rock to grip onto,then out-in-a-flash.

Yes we must above all else remaine Hopefull.
Joe in Texas

hortonheardawho


Posts: 3465

Reply: 163



PostPosted: December 24, 2009 9:08 AM 

sol 2115-2119-2123 ( Dec 15-19-23, 2009 ) super saturated false color L257 animation of soil changes in front of left front wheel:

Er, what?!

Could a Martian soil guy please explain what's happening as the soil is sucked into the Martian mixmaster also known as Spirit?

Barsoomer


Posts: 344

Reply: 164



PostPosted: December 24, 2009 1:50 PM 

Looks like the RF wheel has moved backwards from where it was?!!

John


Posts: 1

Reply: 165



PostPosted: December 24, 2009 2:04 PM 

Hort, I can't see what is happening there. If you could adjust the colors so the solar panels are the same in each image, I think it would help. Being TERRIBLY red-green colorblind does not help.

hortonheardawho


Posts: 3465

Reply: 166



PostPosted: December 24, 2009 3:17 PM 

sol 1978-2123 ( Jul 27-Dec 23, 2009 ) right front wheel animation comparison:

The RF wheel looks like it is within mm of it's position of 6 months ago.

The fresh soil in front of the wheel was probably carried around the wheel from under the wheel the few times it actually rotated.

Hmmm.

There is a most curious winding dark line in the "valley" of the old wheel track.

Also, notice how dusty the solar panels are again after 6 months.

John, You can't compare the colors between images in Color by Horticolor™ - only differences between parts of the same image.

Super-saturated false color makes the statement ever more true - in fact at least three times as true.

Why not ask NASA/JPL/Cornell to create similar super-saturated false color images from the original filters using the radiometrically corrected data? Good luck on that request. In the meantime my humble efforts will have to do.

Serpens


Posts: 169

Reply: 167



PostPosted: December 24, 2009 9:03 PM 

Looks like it rotated fast enough to roll a pebble and create the 'winding dark line'.

Given the topographical map at the link and the fact that the sulphate materials are within the crater but not ouside it there seems to be sufficient circumstantial evidence to point to a fumerole rather than an impact crater. In fact there seems to be an overflow at the top left of the topographical map.

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2009/02dec_troy.htm?list46156

Joe Smith


Posts: 86

Reply: 168



PostPosted: December 24, 2009 10:46 PM 

Merry Christmas,little Spirit,may
your New Year be Happy.
Joe in Texas

Joe Smith


Posts: 86

Reply: 169



PostPosted: December 27, 2009 11:07 AM 

Read on the other site:

5mm forward,10mm Down

Don't look good.It would take a Miracle now.

It's time to start using the arm to move sand.

Joe in Texas

Joe Smith


Posts: 86

Reply: 170



PostPosted: December 27, 2009 11:43 AM 

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6461201.stm

Joe in Sunny Texas

Barsoomer


Posts: 344

Reply: 171



PostPosted: December 30, 2009 4:24 PM 

New images from latest extrication attempt. Looks like the LF wheel is getting buried by the dirt it is moving from the pile. Desperation time? Maybe time to use the RAT Brush to sweep through the pile.

Moved dirt seems to be forming into a strange configuration that mimics the shape of the wheel. Could it be slightly damp to hold that shape?

Joe Smith


Posts: 86

Reply: 172



PostPosted: December 30, 2009 4:47 PM 

I see the LF wheel is turned in-ward,different from other sol's.
Joe in Texas

dx


Posts: 1661

Reply: 173



PostPosted: December 30, 2009 7:45 PM 

...next time NASA should install 4 gassed levelers to the underbelly of all Roving Devices, this way anyone of the 'stuck' wheels can be lifted out of trouble like Spirit is in right NOW!!!

Need an ACE-designer NASA?

yt
dx

Barsoomer


Posts: 344

Reply: 174



PostPosted: December 31, 2009 1:50 PM 

NASA'S Spirit's Woes

Doesn't look good Sad

dx


Posts: 1661

Reply: 175



PostPosted: January 1, 2010 8:23 AM 

folks>>>this just in my box from NASA>>>

yt
dx


MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 91109. TELEPHONE 818-354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov

Guy Webster/Veronica McGregor 818-354-5011
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
guy.webster@jpl.nasa.gov, veronica.mcgregor@jpl.nasa.gov

Dwayne Brown 202-358-1726
NASA Headquarters, Washington
dwayne.c.brown@nasa.gov

News release: 2009-207 Dec. 31, 2009

NASA's Mars Rover has Uncertain Future as Sixth Anniversary Nears

The full version of this story with accompanying images is at:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2009-207&cid=release_2009-207

PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA's Mars rover Spirit will mark six years of unprecedented science
exploration and inspiration for the American public on Sunday. However, the upcoming Martian
winter could end the roving career of the beloved, scrappy robot.

Spirit successfully landed on the Red Planet at 8:35 p.m. PST on Jan. 3, 2004, and its twin
Opportunity arrived at 9:05 p.m. Jan. 24, 2004. The rovers began missions intended to last for three
months but which have lasted six Earth years, or 3.2 Mars years. During this time, Spirit has found
evidence of a steamy and violent environment on ancient Mars that was quite different from the wet
and acidic past documented by Opportunity, which has been operating successfully as it explores
halfway around the planet.

A sand trap and balky wheels are challenges to Spirit's mobility that could prevent NASA's rover
team from using a key survival strategy for the rover. The team may not be able to position the robot's
solar panels to tilt toward the sun to collect power for heat to survive the severe Martian winter.

Nine months ago, Spirit's wheels broke through a crusty surface layer into loose sand hidden
underneath. Efforts to escape this sand trap barely have budged the rover. The rover's inability to use
all six wheels for driving has worsened the predicament. Spirit's right-front wheel quit working in
2006, and its right-rear wheel stalled a month ago. Surprisingly, the right-front wheel resumed
working, though intermittently. Drives with four or five operating wheels have produced little
progress toward escaping the sand trap. The latest attempts resulted in the rover sinking deeper in the
soil.

"The highest priority for this mission right now is to stay mobile, if that's possible," said Steve Squyres
of Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y. He is principal investigator for the rovers.

If mobility is not possible, the next priority is to improve the rover's tilt, while Spirit is able to generate
enough electricity to turn its wheels. Spirit is in the southern hemisphere of Mars, where it is autumn,
and the amount of daily sunshine available for the solar-powered rover is declining. This could result
in ceasing extraction activities as early as January, depending on the amount of remaining power.
Spirit's tilt, nearly five degrees toward the south, is unfavorable because the winter sun crosses low in
the northern sky.

Unless the tilt can be improved or luck with winds affects the gradual buildup of dust on the solar
panels, the amount of sunshine available will continue to decline until May 2010. During May, or
perhaps earlier, Spirit may not have enough power to remain in operation.

"At the current rate of dust accumulation, solar arrays at zero tilt would provide barely enough energy
to run the survival heaters through the Mars winter solstice," said Jennifer Herman, a rover power
engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

The team is evaluating strategies for improving the tilt even if Spirit cannot escape the sand trap, such
as trying to dig in deeper with the wheels on the north side. In February, NASA will assess Mars
missions, including Spirit, for their potential science versus costs to determine how to distribute
limited resources. Meanwhile, the team is planning additional research about what a stationary Spirit
could accomplish as power wanes.

"Spirit could continue significant research right where it is," said Ray Arvidson of Washington
University in St. Louis, deputy principal investigator for the rovers. "We can study the interior of
Mars, monitor the weather and continue examining the interesting deposits uncovered by Spirit's
wheels."

A study of the planet's interior would use radio transmissions to measure wobble of the planet's axis
of rotation, which is not feasible with a mobile rover. That experiment and others might provide more
and different findings from a mission that has already far exceeded expectations.

"Long-term change in the spin direction could tell us about the diameter and density of the planet's
core," said William Folkner of JPL. He has been developing plans for conducting this experiment with
a future, stationary Mars lander. "Short-period changes could tell us whether the core is liquid or
solid," he said.

In 2004, Opportunity discovered the first mineralogical evidence that Mars had liquid water. The
rover recently finished a two-year investigation of a half-mile wide crater called Victoria and now is
headed toward Endeavor crater, which is approximately seven miles from Victoria and nearly 14 miles
across. Since landing, Opportunity has driven more than 11 miles and returned more than 132,000
images.

JPL manages the rovers for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington.

For more information about the rovers, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/rovers or
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov

-end-

Kevin Author Profile Page



Posts: no

Reply: 176



PostPosted: January 2, 2010 9:36 AM 

The only real chance is to get the RF moving as the surface looks more solid there, the arm does not have enough power in it to help and the instruments would get damaged so what would be the point.

In all Spirit has been in trouble for a long time and can still do some good stuff as a lander but will she survive the winter? That might take some clever powersaving techniques however another problem is the budget review in February and that maybe bad news and the plug gets pulled when winter sets in.

Barsoomer


Posts: 344

Reply: 177



PostPosted: January 2, 2010 6:33 PM 

New images on the exploratorium site. Nor sure exactly what is happening. From the front hazcams, it appears the LF wheel has turned even more to the right, but either the IDD arm or the rover chassis seems to be listing more to the left.

hortonheardawho


Posts: 3465

Reply: 178



PostPosted: January 2, 2010 7:51 PM 

sol 2092-2132 Front and Rear Hazcom animation:

and sol 2099-2132 MI animation under the rover:

Joe Smith


Posts: 86

Reply: 179



PostPosted: January 5, 2010 2:36 PM 

Buzzzgoing around,,reliable source.
NASA has given up.
No Further attempts scheduled tor
retrieval of Spirit.

Welcome to Spirit Station.

Joe in Texas

Paul Author Profile Page



Posts: no

Reply: 180



PostPosted: January 5, 2010 10:27 PM 

Not according to Scott Maxwell, one of the rover drivers; he mentions 6 or 8 ideas still not tried yet (posted just a few hours ago):

http://twitter.com/marsroverdriver

Paul

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