MARSDAILY
Curiosity Mars Rover Enters Precautionary Safe Mode
by Staff Writers
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 07, 2016


This May 11, 2016, self-portrait of NASA's Curiosity Mars rover shows the vehicle at the "Okoruso" drilling site on lower Mount Sharp's "Naukluft Plateau." The scene is a mosaic of multiple images taken with the arm-mounted Mars Hands Lens Imager (MAHLI). Image courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS. For a larger version of this image please go here.

The team operating NASA's Curiosity Mars rover is taking steps to return the rover to full activity following a precautionary stand-down over the Fourth of July weekend.

Curiosity is now communicating with ground controllers and is stable. The rover put itself into safe mode on July 2, ceasing most activities other than keeping itself healthy and following a prescribed sequence for resuming communications.

Engineers are working to determine the cause of safe-mode entry. Preliminary information indicates an unexpected mismatch between camera software and data-processing software in the main computer.

The near-term steps toward resuming full activities begin with requesting more diagnostic information from Curiosity.

Curiosity has entered safe mode three times previously, all during 2013.

The rover landed in Mars' Gale Crater in August 2012. During its first year on Mars, the mission achieved its goal by determining that, more than 3 billion years ago, the region offered fresh-water lakes and rivers with environmental conditions well-suited to supporting microbial life, if life has ever existed on Mars.

In continuing investigations, the mission is learning more about the ancient wet environments and how and when they evolved to drier and less habitable conditions.

NASA last week approved an additional two-year extension, beginning Oct. 1, 2016, for the Mars Science Laboratory Project, which developed and operates Curiosity.

.


Related Links
Curiosity at JPL
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

Previous Report
MARSDAILY
Mars Rover's Sand-Dune Studies Yield Surprise
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jul 03, 2016
Some of the wind-sculpted sand ripples on Mars are a type not seen on Earth, and their relationship to the thin Martian atmosphere today provides new clues about the atmosphere's history. The determination that these mid-size ripples are a distinct type resulted from observations by NASA's Curiosity Mars rover (http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl). Six months ago, Curiosity made the first up-clos ... read more


MARSDAILY
IMDO and MDA Complete Integrated Ground Test

Raytheon's air and missile defense radar to be tested

Poland moves towards multi-billion-euro Patriot missile deal

Saudi intercepts ballistic missile from Yemen: coalition

MARSDAILY
Russian Tor-M2U air defense system arrives in Siberia

IAI successfully tests MRSAM defense system

Raytheon gets $23M Evolved Sea Sparrow contract

Varunastra missile handed over to Indian navy

MARSDAILY
Drones to Keep Tabs on Light Pollution

US reveals death tolls from drone and air strikes

Textron's Shadow UAS passes 1 million flight hours

US-led forces destroy own combat drone after Syria crash

MARSDAILY
SES Government Solutions Secures Contract for Thule Tracking Station DS3 Service

MUOS-5 secure communications satellite responding to ground control

How to Improve Enterprise Ground Services for Space

Testing Confirms Intelsat EpicNG Delivers a Whole New Ballgame

MARSDAILY
Spain drops first GBU-48 from Eurofighter Typhoon

Finland in talks to buy used S. Korea howitzers

Northrop receives $103M counter-IED contract mod

Raytheon given U.S. Army projectile contract mod

MARSDAILY
Guns, not roses: Conflicts fire up Bulgaria arms trade

CAE gets $111 million in UAE defense contracts

Senators look to block U.S. sale of bombs to Saudis for bombing of Yemen

US Navy admiral admits he lied in massive bribery scandal

MARSDAILY
'Suwalki Gap' key to NATO's eastern flank security

Lithuania leader marks 'breakthrough' German troop deployment

Why Brexit is bad for NATO, Europe's defence

With an eye on Russia, US and Georgia ink defence pact

MARSDAILY
Tiniest imperfections make big impacts in nano-patterned materials

DNA shaping up to be ideal framework for rationally designed nanostructures

New 'ukidama' nanoparticle structure revealed

Shaping atomically thin materials in suspended structures