SETI bioastro: Fw: Cornell News: New role for MarsLab

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Thu Jul 22 2004 - 10:09:09 PDT

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: cunews_at_cornell.edu<mailto:cunews_at_cornell.edu>
    To: CUNEWS-PHYSICAL_SCIENCE-L_at_cornell.edu<mailto:CUNEWS-PHYSICAL_SCIENCE-L_at_cornell.edu> ; CUNEWS-SCIENCE-L_at_cornell.edu<mailto:CUNEWS-SCIENCE-L_at_cornell.edu>
    Sent: Wednesday, July 14, 2004 5:08 PM
    Subject: Cornell News: New role for MarsLab

    As Mars mission turns to remote operations, Cornell's MarsLab takes
    on major new role

    FOR RELEASE: July 14, 2004

    Contact: David Brand
    Office: 607-255-3651
    E-mail: deb27_at_cornell.edu<mailto:deb27_at_cornell.edu>

    PASADENA, Calif. -- Since the beginning of January the Cornell
    University team running the panoramic cameras, or Pancams, on the two
    Mars rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, has been largely functioning out
    of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena. That's where
    instructions are uplinked, or sent, to the two roving vehicles.

    But as the mission ages -- in April NASA extended its life until at
    least mid-September -- demand is growing for space at JPL for other
    missions, such as Deep Impact and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
    (Both missions also have Cornell involvement; the first studies the
    interior of a comet, the second will get even higher-resolution
    orbital data on Mars.) In addition, the Mars science team members
    need to get back to their universities.

    As a result, the MarsLab at Cornell in Ithaca, N.Y., is gradually
    taking on a new mission: actually generating the instructions for
    uplink directly to the two twin-lensed panoramic cameras atop each
    rover's mast.

    For some months the MarsLab -- the full name is the Cornell
    University Mars Data Analysis Facility -- has been downlinking
    information from the cameras aboard the two rovers, as well as
    carrying out daily health monitoring of the cameras. That means that
    the lab receives the image data concurrently with JPL and, using
    Cornell-developed software, calibrates and assembles the elegant,
    breathtaking mosaics that scan craters, rock-strewn horizons and
    distant hills.

    "At JPL we work with all the scientists on the mission to pull
    together the daily plan for what to send up to the rovers," says Jim
    Bell, associate professor of astronomy at Cornell who leads the
    Pancam team. "Our team's specific job is to put the sequences
    together for Pancam. But instead of doing it at JPL, we have the
    tools at Cornell to do the same work, and in the MarsLab our people
    can participate in the daily operations meetings either by video link
    or by teleconferencing." A month ago, the MarsLab began these daily
    conferences with mission engineers and scientists at JPL and Arizona
    State University, and these conferences will continue until the
    mission ends -- no one knows quite when.During the week of June 13,
    two of the four Cornell researchers qualified to write uplink
    commands for the Pancams, 2002 Cornell graduates Heather Arneson and
    Miles Johnson, returned to Ithaca to test, for the first time, the
    remote operations of the Pancams on Mars directly from the Cornell
    campus. "It wasn't too bad on the first trial," said Arneson, who is
    now back at JPL with Johnson. "All the tools we have were working
    pretty well. The only issues we have to work out are communications."
    Once away from JPL, she observes, people elsewhere in the mission
    team forgot that the two researchers were in Ithaca, and Arneson and
    Johnson had to resort to phone calls. "We had to be more reactive,"
    she recalls.

    The Mars team is spending less and less time at JPL. Already Bell and
    senior researcher associate Rob Sullivan are spending only one week a
    month there, and in mid July, Arneson and Johnson will return
    permanently to Ithaca, to give the remote operations another test.
    The third team member, 1998 Cornell graduate Jon Proton, will be
    back in August, by which time it's expected that the MarsLab will
    routinely be uplinking data to the rover cameras. The fourth member,
    research specialist Elaina McCartney, will be the last to return.

    The four specialists note a big change since the frenzied, euphoric
    early days of the mission. "We would spend about 12 hours a day here,
    on a good day. Now it's more like six hours, or less," says Arneson.
    "The meetings go really quickly, everything's a lot quicker." Says
    McCartney, "Everything is compressed. We have gotten better at it."

    There is a bittersweetness to the atmosphere as this part of the
    mission begins to wind down. On the one hand says Johnson, "there is
    less complexity to what we are doing." On the other hand, notes
    McCartney, when the team was working on Mars time (a Mars day is 24
    hours, 39 minutes and 35 seconds, and the two rovers are on opposite
    sides of the planet) there were "endless science discussions while we
    were away in a backroom writing sequences for the spacecraft, and we
    missed out on a lot of that. Now they have joint meetings scheduled
    at a time when people from uplink staff can participate and know what
    is going on."

    One thing all of the team members agree on: They will be sorry to say
    good-bye to Southern California. "I love it. It's great," says
    McCartney.

    Related World Wide Web sites: The following sites provide
    additional information on this news release. Some might not be part
    of the Cornell University community, and Cornell has no control over
    their content or availability.

    o JPL: <http://www.jpl.nasa.gov>>

    o Cornell Chronicle Mars coverage:
    <
    http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases/rover/rovermenu.html>>

    -30-

    The web version of this release may be found at
    http://www.news.cornell.edu/releases/July04/Mars.uplinkteam.deb.html>

    -- 
    Cornell University News Service
    Surge 3
    Cornell University
    Ithaca, NY 14853
    607-255-4206
    cunews_at_cornell.edu<mailto:cunews_at_cornell.edu>
    http://www.news.cornell.edu>
    

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