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Surveyor Antenna Tests Look Bleak
Flight controllers for NASA's Mars Global Surveyor mission are continuing to work toward isolating what caused a hinge on the spacecraft's high-gain telecommunications antenna to stop moving last week.
This afternoon, engineers received the results of a test
they conducted earlier in the day that moved the hinge one-half
of a degree from side to side. The information from the
spacecraft shows that the hinge moves freely in one direction,
but it's motion appears to be obstructed in the opposite
direction.
The tests are designed to help engineers determine if
the obstruction is internal to the motor mechanism, or external,
such as a thermal blanket or cable obstruction. Flight
controllers continue to analyze the test results and will send
additional commands to the spacecraft tomorrow that will attempt
to move the hinge a little bit more -- one full degree -- in each
direction.
The spacecraft remains in good health and the science
instruments are turned off while engineers continue to define the
hinge.
There are two hinges at the end of the boom that connect to
the high-gain antenna. One hinge, called the azimuth hinge, moves
the antenna from side to side; the other hinge, called the
elevation hinge, moves the antenna up and down. The azimuth
hinge stopped moving midway between its "parked" position and the
position its in when it is transmitting data to Earth.
Surveyor Reports At SpaceWar
Mars 98 Reports From Spacer.Com
Future Missions
Areography
Pathfinder
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JPL - April 22, 1999 - Initial tests of a stuck high gain attenna aboard Mars Global Surveyor are looking problematic with the hinges controlling the attenna moving freely in one direction but not the other. Further tests are planned over the week.