San Francisco Chronicle

Another NASA craft runs out of steam, second this week

- By Marcia Dunn Marcia Dunn is an Associated Press writer.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA has lost a second spacecraft this week, ending a fruitful mission in the asteroid belt.

Running low on fuel for some time, the Dawn spacecraft this week stopped communicat­ing with flight controller­s. Its prolonged silence prompted NASA to declare it dead Thursday, two days after delivering eulogies to the planethunt­ing Kepler Space Telescope. The 9½-yearold Kepler also ran out of fuel, needed for pointing the spacecraft.

They both kept working longer than anticipate­d and their demise had been expected.

Propelled by three ion engines, the 11-year-old Dawn was the first spacecraft to orbit an object in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, and also the first to orbit two places beyond Earth. After circling the asteroid Vesta, Dawn went into orbit around the dwarf planet Ceres.

Mission director and chief engineer Marc Rayman insisted he wasn’t sad. Rather, he said in an email, “I’m thrilled it was so fantastica­lly exciting and productive. Dawn was a spectacula­r success by any measure. It carried humankind on a truly amazing deep space adventure with stunning discoverie­s.”

Ceres is the largest object in the asteroid belt, followed by Vesta. The “astounding” images collected by Dawn are shedding light on the history and evolution of our solar system, said NASA’s science mission chief, Thomas Zurbuchen.

Dawn should remain in orbit around Ceres for decades, according to NASA.

“To me, that is a fitting end to an extraordin­ary extraterre­strial expedition,” Rayman said.

 ?? JPL / NASA / New York Times ?? A Dawn spacecraft photo of the Occator crater, including the Cerealia Facula, on the asteroid Ceres.
JPL / NASA / New York Times A Dawn spacecraft photo of the Occator crater, including the Cerealia Facula, on the asteroid Ceres.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States