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NASA Space

Glitch Halts New Horizons Operations As It Nears Pluto 107

An anonymous reader writes: NASA says their New Horizons probe suffered a temporary communication breakdown on Saturday, 10 days before it's supposed to fly past Pluto. The mission team is working to restore normal communications. "Full recovery is expected to take from one to several days," NASA wrote in a status report on Saturday. "New Horizons will be temporarily unable to collect science data during that time."
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Glitch Halts New Horizons Operations As It Nears Pluto

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  • Oh, PLEASE no... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jeffb (2.718) ( 1189693 ) on Sunday July 05, 2015 @11:04AM (#50047863)

    This has been going so well for such a long time. It will be absolutely heartbreaking if the probe is incapacitated just during the flyby window.

    • +1
      Pretty please, new horizons/NASA?

    • Re:Oh, PLEASE no... (Score:5, Informative)

      by arielCo ( 995647 ) on Sunday July 05, 2015 @11:43AM (#50047999)

      From T(rather brief)FA:

      The “encounter program” includes software to prohibit the very type of automated safe mode that New Horizons executed Saturday afternoon.

      “Encounter mode short-circuits the on board intelligent autopilot so that if something goes wrong, instead of calling home for help, which is what most spacecraft do and what New Horizons does during cruise flight, it will just stay on the timeline. It will try to fix the problem, but it will rejoin the timeline because if it ‘went fetal,’ as we say, if it just called home for help, it could miss the flyby,” New Horizons lead scientist Alan Stern told Discovery News before Saturday’s problem.

    • Yeah.,. But I'm amazed these probes fly through space for years and don't hit even one grain of sand at 75,000kph......that would end them in an instant.
  • by cruff ( 171569 ) on Sunday July 05, 2015 @11:07AM (#50047877)
    Since they only have one shot at the flyby, the New Horizons web site states that the encounter sequence they are uploading will disable the safe mode and instruct the probe to return to the timeline sequence.
    • Since they only have one shot at the flyby, the New Horizons web site states that the encounter sequence they are uploading will disable the safe mode and instruct the probe to return to the timeline sequence.

      It's a hail mary attempt, it switched for some reason and they will be putting in back into that mode and no out. subject: "Can I just say On Behalf Of Humanity", seems the most relevant word at this time.

    • Why cant the sensors have their own memory, and record data, regardless of what the state of the main computer is.

      Each sensor should have its own cpu/OS/storage/backup battery. Main computer can just access each sensors data via http, over internal ethernet (backup wifi), and repackage up to send to earth, while the sensors can keep recording at the same time.

  • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Sunday July 05, 2015 @11:08AM (#50047893) Homepage

    Link [unmannedspaceflight.com]

    Steve5304: Rumors that Contact with new horizons has been lost again or was never regained. Unconfirmed

    Alan Stern: Such rumors are untrue. The bird is communicating nominally.

    Alan Stern is the director of the New Horizons mission. So no worries. :) You can see that two way communication is in progress here [nasa.gov] at the Canberra dish.

    This was a really minor glitch and will have no impact on the mission as a whole. There weren't even any significant observations [planetary.org] planned for today.

    (As a side note, the closer we get to Pluto and the more we see of it [unmannedspaceflight.com] (dark band at the bottom is around the equator), the more it's starting to remind me of an airless Titan [wikimedia.org] :) )

    • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Sunday July 05, 2015 @11:32AM (#50047957) Homepage

      Oh and for the record: Stern calls Pluto a planet, and makes some very [space.com] good [space.com] arguments [discovery.com].

      And I'll add more that he doesn't make (though his are best!): it's ridiculous to call something a "dwarf X" and then say that that doesn't count as an "X". In any other field of science, if you had an "adjective-noun", it would also be classified as a "noun". If you have a dwarf shrew, it's also a shrew. If you have a dwarf fern, it's also a fern. Heck, even in the same field, astronomy, the same rule applies - a dwarf star is also a star.

      Under the IAU definition, extrasolar planets aren't planets either. They don't even have a name - they're not anything at all. Not like we'd be able to classify them under the definition without dispatching a spacecraft all the way to each different star system even if they weren't excluded. The IAU definition also claims that they will create a system to establish more dwarf planets - something that clearly has not been done. There hasn't been a new dwarf planet accepted in nearly a decade, despite the fact that we know the sizes of many of them better than already-accepted candidates were known at the time. Quaoar is much bigger than Ceres, and we know it's size down to a mere 5 kilometers margin of error, yet it's not a dwarf planet. The IAU not only made up their ridiculous definition, but they're not even upholding it.

      As with pretty much every categorization of object in pretty much every field of science, you need heirarchies and multiple groupings to describe the world. Among planets, we already know of significant diversity, and should only expect it to grow - hence we have terrestrial planets, gas giants, ice giants, hot jupiters, super earths, etc, and yes, dwarf planets - which should be just another category among the significant diversity already out there. Everyone knows a planet when they see it - you don't have to scan its orbit to see if it's "cleared" it, with some still-not-yet-agreed-upon definition of "cleared". If it's large enough to relax into a hydrostatic equilibrium, that's both meaningful, intuitive, and what people expect when they hear the word "planet". By any reasonable definition, our solar system has at least dozens, potentially hundreds of planets. And that should be seen as something to celebrate, not to be appalled about.

      • by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Sunday July 05, 2015 @11:50AM (#50048029)

        And I'll add more that he doesn't make (though his are best!): it's ridiculous to call something a "dwarf X" and then say that that doesn't count as an "X".

        Is a toy car actually a car? Is a stuffed animal actually an animal?

        • by darenw ( 74015 )

          Then my favorite example: fool's gold. Is this a type of gold?

          • Then my favorite example: fool's gold. Is this a type of gold?

            Fool's Gold is the layman term/nickname for Iron Pyrite... and it is indeed a type of iron. Not the best comparison :)

          • by cfalcon ( 779563 )

            The point is it really is gold... if you are a fool. It is named this because it looks like gold, but only a fool would think that. Many other things have names that are references to what they look like: Lamb's Foot ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] ) isn't a lamb or a foot, but it is named because it resembles one, Queen Anne's Lace ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] ) is neither a Queen, nor an Anne, nor any manner of lace, etc.

            Toy car is really a *car toy*- a type of toy shaped like a car. A "dwa

          • by khallow ( 566160 )

            Then my favorite example: fool's gold.

            Ah, yes, the definitive scientific term for pyrite/iron sulfide. /sarc

            It's interesting how unscientific the arguments are for claiming a dwarf planet is not a planet.

        • by Burz ( 138833 )

          Are you saying Pluto is a model of something?

          Is a pygmy owl still an owl? [huffingtonpost.com]

      • Pluto prefers to be called a little planet.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Java update.

  • Nooooooooooooo! Nooooooooooooo! Nooooooooooooo! For the love of Hawing, Nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo!!!
  • Aliens (Score:4, Funny)

    by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Sunday July 05, 2015 @11:46AM (#50048009)
    They don't want us to take pictures of their homeworld.
  • New Horizons was launched with mission instructions to proceed beyond Neptune's orbit and look for the next planet.

    Nope. No planets here.

  • Reminds me of my calculus final exam back in the day where my HP calculator started flickering and rebooting 4 minutes before the exam.

    I'll tell you the rest after the Pluto encounter...

  • by Trax3001BBS ( 2368736 ) on Monday July 06, 2015 @01:11AM (#50051223) Homepage Journal

    UPDATE: NASA issued a statement at about 19:30 PT / 22:30 ET July 5 / 02:30 UT July 6 saying that the cause of the safe mode is understood, and that New Horizons will resume science operations on July 7:

    NASA’s New Horizons mission is returning to normal science operations after a July 4 anomaly and remains on track for its July 14 flyby of Pluto.

    The investigation into the anomaly that caused New Horizons to enter “safe mode” on July 4 has concluded that no hardware or software fault occurred on the spacecraft. The underlying cause of the incident was a hard-to-detect timing flaw in the spacecraft command sequence that occurred during an operation to prepare for the close flyby. No similar operations are planned for the remainder of the Pluto encounter.

    “I’m pleased that our mission team quickly identified the problem and assured the health of the spacecraft,” said Jim Green, NASA’s Director of Planetary Science. “Now – with Pluto in our sights – we’re on the verge of returning to normal operations and going for the gold.”

    http://www.planetary.org/blogs... [planetary.org]

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