The missions will continue collecting data about the Red Planet, though
engineers back on Earth will stop sending commands to them until mid-October.
NASA will stand down from commanding its Mars missions for the next few
weeks while Earth and the Red Planet are on opposite sides of the Sun. This
period, called Mars solar conjunction, happens every two
years.
The Sun expels hot, ionized gas from its corona, which extends far into
space. During solar conjunction, when Earth and Mars can’t “see” each other,
this gas can interfere with radio signals if engineers try to communicate with
spacecraft at Mars. That could corrupt commands and result in unexpected
behavior from our deep space explorers.
To be safe, NASA engineers send Mars spacecraft a list of simple
commands to carry out for a few weeks. This year, most missions will stop
sending commands between Oct. 2 and Oct. 16. A few extend that commanding
moratorium, as it’s called, a day or two in either direction, depending on the
angular distance between Mars and the Sun in Earth’s sky.
“Though our Mars missions won’t be as active these next few weeks, they’ll
still let us know their state of health,” said Roy Gladden, manager of
the Mars Relay Network at NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. “Each mission has been given some
homework to do until they hear from us again.”
Here’s how some of those Mars missions will be spending that time:
- Perseverance will take weather measurements with its MEDA (short
for Mars Environmental Dynamics Analyzer) sensors, look for dust devils
with its cameras (though it won’t move its mast, or “head”), run its RIMFAX (Radar
Imager for Mars’ Subsurface Experiment) radar, and capture new sounds with
its microphones.
- The Ingenuity Mars Helicopter will remain stationary at its location 575
feet (175 meters) away from Perseverance and communicate its status weekly
to the rover.
- The Curiosity rover will take weather measurements using its REMS (Rover
Environmental Monitoring Station) sensors, take radiation measurements
with its RAD (Radiation
Assessment Detector) and DAN (Dynamic
Albedo of Neutrons) sensors, and look for dust devils with its suite of
cameras.
- The stationary InSight lander will continue using its seismometer to
detect temblors like the large
marsquakes it captured recently.
- NASA’s three orbiters – Odyssey, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, and
MAVEN – will all continue relaying some data from the agency’s surface
missions back to Earth, in addition to gathering their own science.
While a limited amount of science data will reach Earth during conjunction,
the spacecraft will save most of it until after the moratorium. (That means
there will be a temporary pause in the stream of raw images available
from Perseverance, Curiosity, and InSight.)
Then, they’ll beam their remaining data to NASA’s Deep Space Network, a system of massive
Earth-based radio antennas managed by JPL. Engineers will spend about a week
downloading the information before normal spacecraft operations resume. If the
teams monitoring these missions determine any of the collected science data has
been corrupted, they can usually have that data retransmitted.
For more about NASA’s Mars missions, visit: https://mars.nasa.gov/, https://nasa.gov/mars
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