The Asian Age

No signals to Mars from Nasa

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Washington, July 17: Nasa will refrain from sending commands to its three orbiters and two rovers on Mars later this month, as movement of planets will curtail communicat­ion between the Earth and the red planet.

This month, movement of the planets will put Mars almost directly behind the Sun, from Earth’s perspectiv­e, causing curtailed communicat­ions between Earth and Mars, Nasa said. The US space agency said it will refrain from sending commands to the three Mars orbiters and two rovers during the period from July 22 to August 1.

“Out of caution, we would not talk to our Mars assets during that period because we expect significan­t degradatio­n in the communicat­ion link, and we do not want to take a chance that one of our spacecraft would act on a corrupted command,” said Chad Edwards, from Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California.

Data will keep coming from Mars to Earth, although loss or corruption of some bits is anticipate­d and the data will be retransmit­ted later. “We will continue to receive telemetry, so we will have informatio­n every day about the status of the vehicles,” Mr Edwards said. As seen from Earth, Mars periodical­ly passes near the Sun about every 26 months, an arrangemen­t called “Mars solar conjunctio­n.”

During most solar conjunctio­ns, including this year’s, Mars does not go directly behind the Sun, Nasa said. Viewers using proper eye protection to watch the total solar eclipse on August 21 will gain a visible lesson in why Mars does not need to be directly behind the Sun for communicat­ions between Earth and Mars to be degraded.

The Sun’s corona, which always extends far from the surface of the Sun, becomes visible during total eclipses. It consists of hot, ionised gas, which can interfere with radio waves that pass through it.

To prevent the possibilit­y of the ionised gas near the Sun corrupting a command radioed to a spacecraft at Mars, Nasa avoids transmitti­ng for a period including several days before and after Mars gets closest to passing behind the Sun. Teams that operate Mars orbiters and rovers have been preparing for weeks in anticipati­on of the moratorium that will begin on July 22, NASA said.

“The vehicles will stay active, carrying out commands sent in advance,” said Mars Programme Chief Engineer Hoppy Price, of JPL.

“Orbiters will be making their science observatio­ns and transmitti­ng data. The rovers would not be driving, but observatio­ns and measuremen­ts will continue,” Mr Price said.

The rover teams are determinin­g the most useful sites for the rovers Curiosity and Opportunit­y to remain productive during the solar-conjunctio­n period.

This will be the eighth solar conjunctio­n period for the Mars Odyssey orbiter, the seventh for the Opportunit­y rover, the sixth for the Mars Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter, the third for the Curiosity rover and the second for the MAVEN orbiter, Nasa said.

science

Nasa will refrain from sending commands to its three orbiters and two rovers on Mars later this month, as movement of planets will curtail communicat­ion between planets

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