65dBnoise , to random
@65dBnoise@mastodon.social avatar

New location for on Sol 1144, RMC 52.1950.

This may be the last location visible by 's RTE camera, as the rover has now reached the theoretical limit of its field-of-view (cyan line). The has been programmed to capture one RTE image every sol for as long as it is able to wake up every sol perform its routine of gathering environmental and system data, as a stationary testbed.

stim3on , to random
@stim3on@fosstodon.org avatar

Amazing images are coming down from Intuitive Machines' Odysseus lander, seen here after the lunar insertion maneuver.

Credit: Intuitive Machines, additional color processing and artefact repairs: Simeon Schmauß
https://flic.kr/p/2pzw3tU

chgowiz , (edited )
@chgowiz@dice.camp avatar

@stim3on I have a question about one of your other pictures and maybe this has been already discussed - but I couldn't find any chatter on it.

You did the view of Ingenuity from Perseverance's perspective a few weeks ago. Having seen a brief note that NASA discovered one of the blades broke completely off, I looked at that picture to see if I could see where they may have bounced... I think a piece is over on the left here. Has that been already covered?

ALT
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  • 65dBnoise , to random
    @65dBnoise@mastodon.social avatar

    Dissecting 's accident.

    This animation shows one of the rotor blades before and after the 's 72nd landing. The fact that the image with the broken blade had to shrink and change perspective so much to match the other one is an indication of the RTE camera being much closer to the ground after landing 72.

    Superimposed, transformed RTE images from and .

    Originals:
    https://mars.nasa.gov/mars2020-raw-images/pub/ods/surface/sol/01008/ids/edr/browse/heli/HSF_1008_0756416571_585ECM_N0690001HELI00000_000085J01.png
    https://mars.nasa.gov/mars2020-raw-images/pub/ods/surface/sol/01040/ids/edr/browse/heli/HSF_1040_0759257443_233ECM_N0720001HELI00000_000085J01.png

    video/mp4

    JSharp1436 , to random
    @JSharp1436@mstdn.social avatar

    has stated that the helicopter on has officially taken its last flight

    "72 out of 5 planned flights is pretty darn good"

    📝 Night night, Inge

    AstroHawk , to random
    @AstroHawk@spacey.space avatar

    "The amazing helicopter on Mars, Ingenuity, will fly no more" by @arstechnica / @sciguyspace - #MarsHelicopter #Ingenuity crashed on Flight 72 and cannot fly any more. End of Mission.😢 Exceeded its plan to attempt 5 flights.👍 https://arstechnica.com/space/2024/01/nasas-mars-helicopter-has-made-its-last-flight-above-the-red-planet/ #NASA #Mars #aviation #avgeek #drone

    AstroHawk OP ,
    @AstroHawk@spacey.space avatar

    "Reunited, rekindled, ready" by @daily_hopper comic. Farewell to #NASA's #MarsHelicopter #ingenuity.

    #Mars #aviation #avgeek #drone

    chgowiz , to random
    @chgowiz@dice.camp avatar

    I hope that little 'copter is OK! I've been cheering on Ingenuity since it's arrival on Mars!

    https://www.space.com/nasa-loses-contact-ingenuity-mars-helicopter

    65dBnoise , to random
    @65dBnoise@mastodon.social avatar

    lost communications with during the 's descent for landing after its pop-up , a few sols ago.

    The helicopter was already out of sight and at a distance of ~1km, as seen in the map below. There is an obstructing mound about midway that rises 13m above the line-of-sight, which might be the reason for the loss of signal. Despite that, assuming Ingenuity's landing software worked as usual, the helicopter may be in good health, but

    1/

    AkaSci , to random
    @AkaSci@fosstodon.org avatar

    Not a good day for space missions 😞

    During a short up and down Flight 72, Mars helicopter Ingenuity lost its comm link with rover Perseverance. NASA engineers are working on restoring it.

    This follows Flight 71 on Jan 6 which made an emergency landing 35 seconds into a 125 sec flight; apparently the relatively featureless sandy terrain proved difficult for its navigation system.

    Meanwhile, Voyager 1 is still sending garbled data.

    Stay tuned.

    https://mars.nasa.gov/technology/helicopter/status/508/flight-72-status-update/
    1/n

    AkaSci OP ,
    @AkaSci@fosstodon.org avatar

    Mars helicopter Ingenuity communicates with rover Perseverance using the ultra-low-power Zibgee protocol standard over a 914 MHz link.

    Data rate: 250 kbps
    Range: up to 1 km
    Antenna: Monopole, omni-directional, 7.3 cm tall, 1 mm thick, gold-plated stainless steel.
    Electronics: Commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) radio and processor elements, not radiation hardened.

    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/341504369_The_Mars_Helicopter_Telecommunication_Link_Antennas_Propagation_and_Link_Analysis
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zigbee

    2/n

    AkaSci OP ,
    @AkaSci@fosstodon.org avatar

    Good news from JPL - the Mars helicopter team managed to reestablish contact with Ingenuity after its comm loss since the middle of Flight 72. The team is reviewing data to better understand the root cause of the comm outage.

    This was accomplished by instruction Mars rover Persevere "to perform long-duration listening sessions for Ingenuity’s signal."

    Let's take a look at what that means.


    3/n

    ALT
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