Mars Probe 'Schiaparelli' May Have Crashed Due To Coding Error TechWorm

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probe 'Schiaparelli' may have crashed due to coding error » TechWorm

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Mars probe ‘Schiaparelli’ may have crashed due to coding error 2

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By Kavita Iyer on OCTOBER 30, 2016 Science, Security news, Technology

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Bad code may have doomed ESA Mars lander Schiaparelli
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Schiaparelli, which is a part of European Space Agency’s (ESA) ExoMars mission, conducted
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jointly with the Russian Space Agency Roscosmos that aims to conduct a pre­landing test
before the bigger 2020 mission on Mars. However, the probe crashed while attempting to Subscribe

make its first Martian landing on October 19.
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The ExoMars spacecraft consisted of two parts, a Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) and the
Schiaparelli Entry, Descent and Landing demonstrator module. The 2020 mission will drill two YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE

metres into the Martian surface and study samples for any indicative signs of past or present
life on the red planet. The main objective of the ExoMars mission is to search for evidence of
methane — a gas produced by living microbes on Earth, and traces of which have been
observed by previous Mars missions — and other trace atmospheric gases that could be
signatures of active biological or geological processes. It will also be a communications relay
for the 2020 rover. Recommended by

   

“As it is, we have one part that works very well and one part that didn’t work as we expected,”
says Vago. “The silver lining is that we think we have in hand the necessary information to fix
the problem.”

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3/13/2017 Mars probe 'Schiaparelli' may have crashed due to coding error » TechWorm

Engineers from the ESA have been trying to determine why the lander Schiaparelli crashed
into the surface of Mars on October 19th.

“Figuring out Schiaparelli’s faults and rectifying them is a priority. That’s super important. I
think it’s on everybody’s mind,” Jorge Vago, ExoMars project scientist said in a statement.

Last week, during Schiaparelli’s six­minute landing manoeuvre, controllers from the bases on
Earth lost contact with the lander. Even though the probe was descending pretty well from
the time it detached from the mothership to its three­day descent until the moment the lander
was expected to fire up its thrusters to slow down its descent.

Evidence from data received from Schiaparelli before the signal was abruptly cut off points to
a computer glitch being the most likely cause of the failure.

Preliminary analysis suggests that the lander began the manoeuvre flawlessly, braking
against the planet’s atmosphere and deploying its parachute. However, something went
wrong at 4 minutes and 41 seconds into an almost 6­minute fall. The lander’s heat shield and
parachute ejected ahead of time, said Vago. Then thrusters, designed to decelerate the craft
for 30 seconds until it was meters off the ground, engaged for only around 3 seconds before
they were commanded to switch off, because the lander’s computer thought it was on the
ground.

ESA investigators believe that the instruments might have been turned on and that the lander
was ready for the Martian weather and magnetic field. However, the problem could have
ignited from switching the gears way earlier or in a way higher altitude than it should.

“My guess is that at that point we were still too high. And the most likely scenario is that, from
then, we just dropped to the surface,” Vago added in the interview.

The ESA probe is thought to have fallen to the Martian surface from an altitude of two to four
kilometres (1.2 to 2.5 miles). According to the satellite images, the probe was likely travelling
at more than 300 km/hr (186 mph) when it crashed into an equatorial Martian plain, it has
been confirmed. According to images taken by NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, it may
have exploded on impact because its fuel tanks were almost full.

It is very important to determine what happened to Schiaparelli, as it is vital to the future of
ExoMars, an ambitious two­stage mission to search for signs of life on the Red Planet.

“That’s super important,” Mr Vago added. “I think it’s on everybody’s mind.”

The primary function of Schiaparelli was to test the automated Russian­designed landing
   
system that will transport a much larger six­wheeled vehicle onto the planet in 2021.

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Kavita Iyer
An individual, optimist, homemaker, foodie, a die hard cricket fan and most importantly
who believes in Being Human 

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2 COMMENTS

ANDREW KLEPATSKY on OCTOBER 30, 2016 6:26 PM

Today after more than a week of investigating the telemetry signal, the article could have given more
information about the real trajectory of the Schiaparelli. I think that due to negative lift the vehicle
descended along a steeper path than the expected one. It was the fault of engineers. They had to
control the angle of attack during descent of Schiaparelli as the designers of Curiosity successfully did.

REPLY 

KELLY CLARK on NOVEMBER 3, 2016 2:40 PM

Nowadays a lot of scientists and organizations are interested in the possibility of colonizing Mars in the
near future. I read at http://solarstory.net/planets/mars that there are lots of theories about how we
can make Mars more livable. One of them is about 柖�lling the planet with oxygen-producing microbes.
NASA began sending probes to the planet surface to better understand the planet in the early 2000’s
and before that there have been several unmanned missions to Mars starting since the 1960’s. I think
at this rate we will be able to send the 柖�rst human to Mars no sooner than in 2050

REPLY 

   

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