In November 2006, spacecraft operators noticed that one of its 14 camera detector pairs has been sending back images with increased noise, such as bad pixels. Unfortunately, this problem has spread, and now 5 other detectors are suffering the same glitch. Although this isn’t a big deal on image quality, and the operators have ways of minimizing its impact, they aren’t sure if the problem is going to get worse.
The second problem is with the spacecraft’s Climate Sounder. This instrument is supposed to map out the planet’s temperature, ice clouds and dust distributions on each of 13 orbits it does every day. Unfortunately, the detector started skipping steps in December 2006, so that its field of view has been getting out of position. The errors from the instrument have become more frequent, so it’s been taken offline until engineers can figure out a solution.
Original Source: NASA News Release
One explanation for dark matter is that it's made out of primordial black holes, formed…
The seasonal variations of methane in the Martian atmosphere is an intriguing clue that there…
For decades, astronomers have used powerful instruments to capture images of the cosmos in various…
Although the outer Solar System is mostly empty, there are icy objects drifting within the…
A stellar odd couple 700 light-years away is creating a chaotically beautiful display of colourful,…
About 370,000 years after the Big Bang, the Universe had cooled down so light could…