MARSDAILY
Curiosity Rover to Temporarily Switch 'Brains'
by Staff Writers
Pasadena CA (JPL) Oct 04, 2018

Curiosity selfie

Engineers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, this week commanded the agency's Curiosity rover to switch to its second computer. The switch will enable engineers to do a detailed diagnosis of a technical issue that has prevented the rover's active computer from storing science and some key engineering data since Sept. 15.

Like many NASA spacecraft, Curiosity was designed with two, redundant computers - in this case, referred to as a Side-A and a Side-B computer - so that it can continue operations if one experiences a glitch. After reviewing several options, JPL engineers recommended that the rover switch from Side B to Side A, the computer the rover used initially after landing.

The rover continues to send limited engineering data stored in short-term memory when it connects to a relay orbiter. It is otherwise healthy and receiving commands. But whatever is preventing Curiosity from storing science data in long-term memory is also preventing the storage of the rover's event records, a journal of all its actions that engineers need in order to make a diagnosis. The computer swap will allow data and event records to be stored on the Side-A computer.

Side A experienced hardware and software issues over five years ago on sol 200 of the mission, leaving the rover uncommandable and running down its battery. At that time, the team successfully switched to Side B. Engineers have since diagnosed and quarantined the part of Side A's memory that was affected so that computer is again available to support the mission.

"At this point, we're confident we'll be getting back to full operations, but it's too early to say how soon," said Steven Lee of JPL, Curiosity's deputy project manager. "We are operating on Side A starting today, but it could take us time to fully understand the root cause of the issue and devise workarounds for the memory on Side B.

"We spent the last week checking out Side A and preparing it for the swap," Lee said. "It's certainly possible to run the mission on the Side-A computer if we really need to. But our plan is to switch back to Side B as soon as we can fix the problem to utilize its larger memory size."


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

MARSDAILY
Curiosity Surveys a Mystery Under Dusty Skies
Pasadena CA (JPL) Sep 07, 2018
After snagging a new rock sample on Aug. 9, NASA's Curiosity rover surveyed its surroundings on Mars, producing a 360-degree panorama of its current location on Vera Rubin Ridge. The panorama includes umber skies, darkened by a fading global dust storm. It also includes a rare view by the Mast Camera of the rover itself, revealing a thin layer of dust on Curiosity's deck. In the foreground is the rover's most recent drill target, named "Stoer" after a town in Scotland near where important discover ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

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

MARSDAILY
Raytheon receives $1.5B contract for Patriot systems for Poland

Raytheon receives contract for new AEGIS radars

Pentagon to pull some Patriots from Middle East: US official

Lockheed Martin to upgrade AEGIS Combat System for U.S. warships

MARSDAILY
Lockheed contracted by Army for HIMARS launchers, support

Raytheon, Lockheed contracted for Javelin missiles for six countries

Hezbollah defies Israel, says has 'precision missiles'

Northrop Grumman tapped for conversion of anti-radiation missiles

MARSDAILY
General Atomics to provide technical services for Gray Eagle drones

Raytheon to deliver small drone decoys to the U.S. Navy

Self-flying glider 'learns' to soar like a bird

General Atomics contracted for Reaper drone ground control work

MARSDAILY
Multi-domain command and control is coming

Airbus tests 4G 5G stratospheric balloons for defence comms

Lockheed Martin embraces agile software development to evolve signals intelligence capabilities

Lockheed Martin Introduces Mission Planning System That Connects Systems and Assets Across Domains

MARSDAILY
Taiwan, Bahrain contract Lockheed for sniper targeting pods

WWII bombs sent shockwaves to the edge of space

L-3 receives contract for Bradley, MLRS transmissions

American Ordnance contracted for 40mm grenade training rounds

MARSDAILY
US Congress passes major spending bill, sending it to Trump

Boeing's takeover of satellite firm further consolidates space defense industry

France fears damage after Hollande fans controversy over India arms deal

India's Modi mauled over French defence deal

MARSDAILY
Expanded Marine rotational force deploys to Norway

Amid trade spat, US-China military tensions soar

British minister slams 'pariah state' Russia

Mattis vows 'iron-clad' US support as NATO plans huge drills

MARSDAILY
Precise control of multimetallic one-nanometer cluster formation achieved

Two quantum dots are better than one: Using one dot to sense changes in another

Nucleation a boon to sustainable nanomanufacturing

New nanoparticle superstructures made from pyramid-shaped building blocks