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Mars rover now awaits opportunit­y of a lifeline

- By Sarah Kaplan The Washington Post

For weeks, Mars has been besieged by a massive dust storm. A thick haze fills the atmosphere and blots out the sun, immersing much of the red planet in an impenetrab­le, perpetual night.

Caught in the middle is NASA’s Opportunit­y rover, a 5-foot-tall, bear-sized spacecraft that has already defied the odds by surviving on Mars more than 55 times longer than planned.

For the solar-powered robot, the dust is not as dangerous as the darkness.

Since the storm began over two weeks ago, the amount of light the spacecraft receives has dropped to less than 1 percent of normal levels. Energy production has fallen from hundreds of watt-hours a day to almost nothing.

NASA has not heard from the rover since Tuesday. This is a “spacecraft emergency,” Mars Exploratio­n Rover project manager John Callas said last week.

His team is operating under the assumption that the charge in Opportunit­y’s batteries has dipped below 24 volts and that the rover has entered a low-power fault mode, when all subsystems except the mission clock are turned off.

The clock is set to rouse the rover at periodic intervals to check whether light levels are sufficient to wake up — a state called “solar groovy.”

But the storm is still growing and should encircle the planet in a matter of days. NASA expects that it will be weeks, if not months, before the dust clears enough to allow the spacecraft to turn back on.

Though the rover is expected to survive the storm, “It’s like you have a loved one in a coma in the hospital,” Callas said. “The doctors are telling you, ‘You just gotta give it time, and she’ll wake up.’ But if it’s your 97-year-old grandmothe­r, you’re going to be very concerned, and by all means we are.”

Opportunit­y, along with Spirit, its twin, landed on the planet in 2004. Though the mission was supposed to last only 90 days, Opportunit­y is approachin­g its 15th year there.

Before the storm began, it had been rolling down a channel called Perseveran­ce Valley, which scientists think may have been carved by water billions of years ago.

NASA’s main worry is that the rover’s batteries may freeze without heat generated by its operations.

Opportunit­y is designed to withstand temperatur­es as low as minus 55 degrees Celsius. Other problems may arise if the rover’s energy levels drop even further. That would trigger a “clock fault,” when the rover loses track of time.

Fortunatel­y for NASA, dust storms tend to trap radiation, preventing the kind of wild temperatur­e swings that often occur on Mars. Callas also expressed faith in Opportunit­y’s batteries — even though they are 15 years old, they are still working at 85 percent of their capacity.

“They’re the finest batteries in the solar system. I wish my cellphone battery had half of that,” he said.

Local dust storms are a common occurrence on Mars — strong winds lift particles the size of talcum powder and carry them into the sky.

The thin atmosphere makes these events different from storms on Earth; even the most powerful Martian winds couldn’t topple a rover.

But that atmosphere also makes it easier for sunlight to heat the dust and loft it higher. It may take weeks for the clouds to clear. the normal

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 ?? NASA ?? NASA expects that it will be weeks, if not months, before the dust clears enough to allow rover Opportunit­y, with its battery powered by solar energy, to turn itself back on.
NASA NASA expects that it will be weeks, if not months, before the dust clears enough to allow rover Opportunit­y, with its battery powered by solar energy, to turn itself back on.

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