Computer Glitch Suspends NASA Mars Rover Operation

By Reuters
March 05, 2013
Credit: NASA/JPL

A computer glitch, possibly caused by radiation, has put on hold the Mars rover Curiosity’s first attempt to analyze powder from inside an ancient rock, officials said on Monday.

Engineers said they hope the NASA rover can resume limited science operations this week.

“I don’t expect there to be any long-term impact,” project manager Richard Cook told Reuters. But “it’s probably too early to tell.”

The $2.5 billion robotic geology station was in the middle of analyzing its first samples drilled out from the interior of a rock when its primary computer developed a problem on Wednesday.

The craft transmitted the results of four onboard laboratory tests to ground controllers before science operations were suspended, Cook said.

The rover landed inside the Gale Crater impact basin, located near the Martian equator, on Aug. 6, 2012, for a two-year mission to see if the planet most like Earth in the solar system has or ever had the chemistry and conditions to support microbial life.

Engineers over the weekend switched the rover to its identical backup computer system.

On Monday Curiosity was beginning to emerge from the shutdown of all but essential systems following the electronic brain transplant. Meanwhile, troubleshooting on the faulty computer system is under way.

“We plan to do a couple of more checkouts on the original computer, probably on Wednesday,” Cook said.

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