Image Of The day

See the newest image from scientist ultra advanced device

Planck Image Of The Early Universe

The color-coded image is effectively a photograph of the universe when it was only 379 000 y old,which was about 13.7 billion years ago. An amazing picture from the universe

Two colliding galaxies

The colliding galaxies NGC 4676 leave a trail of stars, this image was taken by Hubble Space Telescope

Earth seen from Appllo Moon landing mision

Space Exploration in the middle 20th century increasing human knowledge to new era science

CERN Large Hadron Collider tunnel

Huge particle smasher, like LHC is a gigantic and complex engineering marvel that disigned to detect particles at extreme energies

Hubble Space telescope seen from last service

Multi billion dollar device like HST can brings very deep image from the heart of the universe

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Is Phobos-Grunt Dead? Troubled Russian Probe Still Unresponsive


The European Space Agency announced today (Dec. 2) that it will stop trying to contact the beleaguered Russian Phobos-Grunt spacecraft, which has been stuck in the wrong orbit for almost a month now.
Russia's Phobos-Grunt probe launched Nov. 8 on a mission to collect and return samples from Mars' moon Phobos. But the spacecraft's thrusters malfunctioned shortly after launch, leaving it stuck in a low orbit around Earth rather than on a course for the Red Planet.
A signal from Phobos-Grunt was picked up last week by a European tracking station located in Australia, and since then, the European Space Agency (ESA) has been helping Russia's Federal Space Agency with efforts to rescue the troubled probe.
However, all subsequent attempts to call Phobos-Grunt have failed to make contact, and ESA announced today that it will cease trying.
"In consultation and agreement with Phobos-Grunt mission managers, ESA engineers will end tracking support today," agency officials said in a statement. "Efforts in the past week to send commands to and receive data from the Russian Mars mission via ESA ground stations have not succeeded; no response has been seen from the satellite." [Photos: Russia's Mars Moon Mission]
The agency had attempted to send instructions to the spacecraft to boost its orbit, but officials reported that these commands went unanswered.
Russian officials were unable to decipher the information that was received from ESA's Australian ground station from the probe. While some data received by a Russian station in Baikonour, Kazakhstan reportedly indicated the spacecraft's radio equipment was operational, efforts to regain contact with Phobos-Grunt have failed.
Ultimately, ESA engineers say they have not completely given up hope for Phobos-Grunt. While the chances to save the marooned spacecraft appear to be dwindling, agency officials maintained their willingness to help if needed.
"ESA teams remain available to assist the Phobos-Grunt mission if indicated by any change in situation," officials said in an update posted on ESA's website.
Yet, time is quickly running out to save the $165 million mission, and Russian officials remain tight-lipped about the status of their rescue efforts. The window of opportunity for the probe to reach the Martian moon has closed already, since the journey requires Earth and Mars to be properly aligned.
If control cannot be regained of the spacecraft, scientists have predicted that Phobos-Grunt could fall back to Earth as a piece of space debris sometime in mid-January.
The ambitious Russian mission was designed to study Phobos and return rocks from the Martian moon to Earth in 2014. Phobos-Grunt is the 19th spacecraft Russia has launched toward Mars since 1960. To date, none has achieved full mission success.

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