CAPE CANAVERAL, FL – The longest surviving robot ever to explore the surface of Mars – the Opportunity Mars Exploration Rover - was declared dead by NASA officials today, Feb 13, after conducting a record-setting 15 year mission on the Red Planet when she failed to respond to a final set of ‘Phone Home’ sent last night from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California.
Opportunity discovered wide ranging and wide spread evidence that liquid water conducive to life flowed on the Red Planets surface long ago. And time and time again she proved the premise and utility of dispatching a mobile robot geologist to uncover the scientific clues.
The golf cart sized Opportunity
died 15 years into her planned 90 day mission!! - and trekked more than a marathon runners distance - a magnificent tribute to everyone on the team that designed, built and
operated her.
NASA engineers made one final attempt at a ‘Phone Home Call’ with their world famous Opportunity Mars Rover that has not communicated a single bit since a massive global dust storm struck eight months ago, silencing the long lived solar powered robot
NASA engineers made one final attempt at a ‘Phone Home Call’ with their world famous Opportunity Mars Rover that has not communicated a single bit since a massive global dust storm struck eight months ago, silencing the long lived solar powered robot
"I was there with the team as these
commands went out into the deep sky, and I learned this morning that we had not
heard back and Opportunity remained silent," said Dr. Thomas Zurbuchen,
associate administrator for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, to a packed
house of scientists and engineers at JPL at 2 PM EST today, Feb 13.
"It is therefore that I'm standing here
with a sense of deep appreciation and gratitude that I declare the Opportunity
mission as complete, and with it the
Mars Exploration Rover mission complete.”
"I have to tell you, it's an emotional time."
"I have to tell you, it's an emotional time."
"Science is an emotional affair, it's a
team sport, and that's what we're celebrating today."
The long lived robot
succumbed to a massive dust storm of historic proportions that encircled the
planet eight months ago and turned day into night – thereby starving the six
wheeled solar powered robot and killing her capability to convert sunlight into
electricity and generate power to reharge her batteries.
The last communication from the robot nicknamed ‘Oppy’ with Earth was received June 10, 2018 (Sol 5111) where she stands at Perseverance Valley – a gully carved by flowing liquid water in ancient times along the eroded rim of giant Endeavour Crater.
Since last June NASA pulled out all the stops to try and regain contact with Opportunity.
In fact on the occasion of her 15th landing anniversary last month (Jan. 24) NASA announced that engineers were implementing a new strategy in hopes of making renewed contact.
“The team is continuing to listen for the rover over a broad range of times, frequencies and polarizations using the Deep Space Network (DSN) Radio Science Receiver,” said NASA.
As of today more than 1000 recovery commands were transmitted from the team via the DSN – but nothing has been heard back from Oppy.
“We have made every reasonable engineering effort to try to recover Opportunity and have determined that the likelihood of receiving a signal is far too low to continue recovery efforts," said John Callas, manager of the Mars Exploration Rover (MER) project at the JPL briefing.
The final transmission last night was sent via the 70-meter Mars Station antenna at NASA's Goldstone Deep Space Complex in California.
“We were meant to get to this point, to wear these rovers out, to leave behind no unutilized capability on the surface of Mars, but we had no idea it would take this long. But even still, this is a hard day, and this is hard for me because I was there at the beginning.”
The last communication from the robot nicknamed ‘Oppy’ with Earth was received June 10, 2018 (Sol 5111) where she stands at Perseverance Valley – a gully carved by flowing liquid water in ancient times along the eroded rim of giant Endeavour Crater.
Since last June NASA pulled out all the stops to try and regain contact with Opportunity.
In fact on the occasion of her 15th landing anniversary last month (Jan. 24) NASA announced that engineers were implementing a new strategy in hopes of making renewed contact.
“The team is continuing to listen for the rover over a broad range of times, frequencies and polarizations using the Deep Space Network (DSN) Radio Science Receiver,” said NASA.
As of today more than 1000 recovery commands were transmitted from the team via the DSN – but nothing has been heard back from Oppy.
“We have made every reasonable engineering effort to try to recover Opportunity and have determined that the likelihood of receiving a signal is far too low to continue recovery efforts," said John Callas, manager of the Mars Exploration Rover (MER) project at the JPL briefing.
The final transmission last night was sent via the 70-meter Mars Station antenna at NASA's Goldstone Deep Space Complex in California.
“We were meant to get to this point, to wear these rovers out, to leave behind no unutilized capability on the surface of Mars, but we had no idea it would take this long. But even still, this is a hard day, and this is hard for me because I was there at the beginning.”
She has driven
over 28 miles (45 km) on an amazing overland expedition of science and
discovery since landing on Mars 15 years ago!
And she spotted dust devils along the way. Wind related events helped clean off the solar panels renewing her energy and extending her life numerous times.
"I will never forget the amazing work that happened here,” Zurbuchen stated with emotion.
It transformed our understanding of our planet. Everything we do and think about in our planetary neighborhood with Mars and elsewhere relates to the research that came from that, and the engineering breakthroughs that came from that."
To illustrate
Opportunity’s adventures, I’m including herein several of the hundreds of
Opportunity rover mosaics created by the imaging team of Ken Kremer (founder
and editor of Space UpClose) and Marco Di Lorenzo. Also check out our route map
showing the entire 15 year journey across Mars.
Until the historic
planet encircling dust storm hit in late May 2018, the six wheeled robot had
operated for 14 and one half years !! - far
beyond the wildest expectations of the science and engineering team.
In fact Opportunity mission was only warrantied to last a mere 90 sols, or 3 months since sending her first signal back to Earth from the surface on Jan. 24 at 9:05 p.m. PST (Jan. 25, 2004, at 12:05 a.m. EST).
In fact Opportunity mission was only warrantied to last a mere 90 sols, or 3 months since sending her first signal back to Earth from the surface on Jan. 24 at 9:05 p.m. PST (Jan. 25, 2004, at 12:05 a.m. EST).
In
the end she endured and explored for nearly 15 years and more than 55 times
beyond what scientists planned.
Since
then Opportunity has conducted a resoundingly successful scientific foray on the alien Red Planets surface
on an stunning overland trek encompassing more than 28 miles (45 kilometers) across
a region called Meridiani Planum.
"For more than a decade, Opportunity has
been an icon in the field of planetary exploration, teaching us about Mars'
ancient past as a wet, potentially habitable planet, and revealing uncharted
Martian landscapes," said Zurbuchen
"Whatever loss we feel now must be
tempered with the knowledge that the legacy of Opportunity continues – both on
the surface of Mars with the Curiosity rover and InSight lander – and in the
clean rooms of JPL, where the upcoming Mars 2020 rover is taking shape."
When the massive planet-encircling dust storm hit Opportunity had been descending down and exploring Perseverance Valley located along the eroded western rim of the gigantic 22-km diameter (14 mi) impact crater named Endeavour.
When the massive planet-encircling dust storm hit Opportunity had been descending down and exploring Perseverance Valley located along the eroded western rim of the gigantic 22-km diameter (14 mi) impact crater named Endeavour.
Amazingly after an
interplanetary journey of more than 100 million miles she rolled to a stop and made
a hole in one landing inside shallow Eagle Crater. She bounced two dozen times
during the improbable airbag assisted landing.
Opportunity and
twin sister Spirit found extensive evidence that liquid water once flowed on
Mars billions of years ago ago when it was warmer and wetter and thus could potentially
have supported Martian microbial life forms. Opportunity discovered clay
minerals that formed in pH neutral water more conducive to life.
As of Feb 12, 2019 long lived Opportunity has survived or experienced over 5350 Sols (or Martian days) roving the harsh environment of the Red Planet.
As of Feb 12, 2019 long lived Opportunity has survived or experienced over 5350 Sols (or Martian days) roving the harsh environment of the Red Planet.
Opportunity has taken over
228,771 images and traversed over 28.06 miles (45.16 kilometers) - more than a marathon.
Stay tuned here for Ken's continuing Earth and Planetary science and human spaceflight news: www.kenkremer.com –www.spaceupclose.com – twitter @ken_kremer – email: ken at kenkremer.com
Dr. Kremer is a research scientist and journalist based in the
KSC area, active in outreach and interviewed on TV and radio about space topics.
………….
Ken’s photos are for sale and he is available for lectures and outreach events
Ken’s upcoming talks:
Apr 3: “Exploring Mars; The Search for Life & A Journey in 3-D.” 7 PM, Lawton C Johnson Middle School, Summit, NJ. Open to the public. Details upcoming. Latest results from Mars & Ultima Thule
Ken’s upcoming talks:
Apr 3: “Exploring Mars; The Search for Life & A Journey in 3-D.” 7 PM, Lawton C Johnson Middle School, Summit, NJ. Open to the public. Details upcoming. Latest results from Mars & Ultima Thule
Spirit and Opportunity rover accomplishments by the numbers: Credit: NASA/JPL |
No comments:
Post a Comment