Return-path: X-Andrew-Authenticated-as: 0;andrew.cmu.edu;Network-Mail Received: from andrew.cmu.edu via trymail for +dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr1/ota/space/space.dl@andrew.cmu.edu (->+dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr1/ota/space/space.dl) (->ota+space.digests) ID ; Tue, 27 Sep 88 22:08:25 -0400 (EDT) Received: from andrew.cmu.edu via qmail ID ; Tue, 27 Sep 88 22:06:39 -0400 (EDT) Received: by andrew.cmu.edu (5.54/3.15) id for +dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr1/ota/space/space.dl; Tue, 27 Sep 88 22:05:27 EDT Received: by angband.s1.gov id AA13016; Tue, 27 Sep 88 19:07:54 PDT id AA13016; Tue, 27 Sep 88 19:07:54 PDT Date: Tue, 27 Sep 88 19:07:54 PDT From: Ted Anderson Message-Id: <8809280207.AA13016@angband.s1.gov> To: Space+@andrew.cmu.edu Reply-To: Space+@andrew.cmu.edu Subject: SPACE Digest V8 #379 SPACE Digest Volume 8 : Issue 379 Today's Topics: Re: Soviet Mars probe PHOBOS 1 communications lost enroute. Re: Soviet Mars probe PHOBOS 1 communications lost enroute. Re: Watching Shuttle Land at Edwards AFB Israeli spysat Israel joins the space club space news from Aug 29 AW&ST ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 10 Sep 88 03:22:48 GMT From: att!cbnews!wbt@ucbvax.berkeley.edu (William B. Thacker) Subject: Re: Soviet Mars probe PHOBOS 1 communications lost enroute. Sender: cbnews.ATT.COM (William B. Thacker) Followup-To: Distribution: Organization: AT&T Bell Laboratories, Columbus Keywords: mtwain.dec.com (CUP/ML, MLO5-2/G1 8A, 223-3283) writes: > > The Soviet news agency TASS today announced that communications > with the Mars probe PHOBOS 1 have been lost due to human error. > The wrong code was sent up to PHOBOS 1, and it appears there is no > possibility of getting signals back from the probe. This is sadly > reminiscent of the code error sent to the VIKING 1 lander in 1982 > which accidentally shut it down permanently. > Why is this "feature" present in unmanned probes ? I guess I can understand why you might want to shut the thing down permanently, if for no other reason than you're tired of listening, or you don't want someone to eavesdrop or take control of the bird. But why wouldn't the thing 1) have a fail-safe (Are You Sure ? (y/n)) or 2) stay "live" on batteries for a few hours in case it was a mistake ? ------------------------------ valuable coupon ------------------------------- Bill Thacker cbosgd!cbema!wbt "C" combines the power of assembly language with the flexibility of assembly language. Disclaimer: Farg 'em if they can't take a joke ! ------------------------------- clip and save -------------------------------- ------------------------------ Date: 14 Sep 88 07:09:19 GMT From: mcvax!enea!tut!santra!kolvi!kwi@uunet.uu.net (Kaj Wiik) Subject: Re: Soviet Mars probe PHOBOS 1 communications lost enroute. Original_From: VTTINS::LEPPELMR Phobos I news G.W. Leppelmeier 12.9.88 At the last session of the meeting of the International Science Committee of the Spectrum-X-Gamma project, Friday, 9.9.88, Prof. R. Sagdeev gave a presentation of "all we know at present about what has happened to Phobos I". These are my notes from that presentation. A few weeks ago it was decided to move the control of Phobos I from the Crimean Space Center to a Center near Moscow. Among other things, this involved using a new computer with a different keyboard. Traps were installed in the new operating system to catch characteristic operator errors, including one wherein an operator now had to insert a particular character at the end of a command. If he failed to do so, a reminder would come on the screen asking him if he had forgotten to do so, and the computer would not continue unless the character were included, OR the operator specifically overode the computer. On 29.8.88 a very long message was being prepared for transmission to Phobos I. At one point, near the end of the message, the operator failed to add the character, the computer stopped, but failed to display the question on the screen. The operator thought it was a computer error and overode the stop. The absence of the particular character changed the bit pattern of the following instruction, into a bit pattern, not on the list of accepted commands, but which did call an area of the onboard ROM which had a list of possible commands, used in development and left there for possible future use. Unfortunately, the particular pattern created in this error translated into turning off the attitude control thrusters. Two days later the Control Center sent a message to Phobos I and received no answer. It is now believed that as the spacecraft slowly changed orientation it lost power, because the solar panels no longer faced the sun, and everything turned off. The serious concern is that many items [from private conversations I gather both in spacecraft support and instruments] need electrical power to avoid becoming too cold, and will be permanently damaged if they get too cold. Sagdeev listed the following points as links in the chain: - error on operator's part - computer failure - operator decision to circumvent computer - absence of cross checks - actual command sent able to enter ROM - The OB computer must be programmed to prevent suicide. [I beleive RS said the OBCPU was 8-bit. You can't do much checking with such a small cpu on such a large spacecraft.] This is the first failure of a Soviet deep space spacecraft since 1972. Added 14.9: This is what I wrote when I returned from Moscow. Looking at my notes, I realise that the move of control center may have taken place on 29.8 and the transmission error later. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 21 Sep 88 09:27:49 PST From: Peter Scott Subject: Re: Watching Shuttle Land at Edwards AFB X-Vms-Mail-To: EXOS%"space@andrew.cmu.edu" >apple!dan@rutgers.edu (Dan Allen) writes: >Does anyone know the scoop on being able to go on base at Edwards AFB >for the Shuttle landing in October or whenever it is going to land? I >went to a landing in 1982 there but did not make any of the details. I >have heard a rumor that the public is not allowed on base any more for >landings. Any truth to this rumor? If this message makes it to you before the shuttle lands, you could try calling the Edwards Public Information Office at (805) 277-3510. Peter Scott (pjs%grouch@jpl-mil.jpl.nasa.gov) ------------------------------ Date: 20 Sep 88 13:17:48 GMT From: mcvax!enea!erix!howard@uunet.uu.net (Howard Gayle) Subject: Israeli spysat From articles in the 19 and 20 September 1988 issues of Dagens Nyheter... Israel has launched an experimental satellite that is a step toward an advanced spysat to be launched within 2 years. The decision to build a spysat was made several years ago, when the Israeli government realized that the US was not going to share imagery. The launcher is to be a Jericho II medium-range missile. The main motivation is that Irak and Syria have acquired medium-range missiles. The Israelis want advanced warning if these missiles are deployed, to give time for air strikes. Howard Gayle TN/ETX/TX/UMG Ericsson Telecom AB S-126 25 Stockholm Sweden howard@ericsson.se {mcvax, uunet}!enea!ericsson.se!howard Phone: +46 8 719 5565 FAX : +46 8 719 9598 Telex: 14910 ERIC S ------------------------------ Date: 19 Sep 88 16:04:47 GMT From: palmer@tybalt.caltech.edu (David Palmer) Subject: Israel joins the space club Israel launched a satellite today on their own booster, according to a report on NPR. In the LA Times (in an article written pre-launch), the Israeli government was quoted as saying, in response to reports that it was a spysat, that "We never said it was a spy satellite, what makes you think it's a spy satellite?" (quoted very roughly from memory). But at least we have a good chance of beating Andora back into space. David Palmer palmer@tybalt.caltech.edu ...rutgers!cit-vax!tybalt.caltech.edu!palmer "Flowers -- Just say NO!!" - Mighty Mouse ------------------------------ Date: 20 Sep 88 03:19:39 GMT From: clyde!watmath!utgpu!utzoo!henry@bellcore.com (Henry Spencer) Subject: space news from Aug 29 AW&ST Arianespace completes technical negotiations with major contractors for a block order of 50 Ariane 4s, being done in hopes of driving costs down. Mitsubishi Electric to supply Japan's ETS-6 experimental satellite with a xenon-ion thruster, to replace conventional hydrazine station-keeping thrusters and increase the satellite's life. NASA braces itself to point the finger at Sept 29 for STS-26 launch. Revised shuttle manifest expected to show two fewer missions in 1989. Interest in small, lightweight satellites, and vehicles to launch them, grows. Potential uses are mostly classified, but major ones include scouting for Soviet mobile missiles, and tactical intelligence. John Pike of the Federation of American Scientists, after studying US spysat work, believes that DARPA's Lightsat project is primarily meant to provide a cheap replacement for the KH-12 for tactical intelligence. He says that US satellite-intelligence users split into three camps -- tactical commanders in the field, strategic planners, and arms-control verifiers -- with three different sets of requirements -- tactical real-time imaging of central Europe, quick imaging of the Soviet Union to find mobile strategic missiles, and ultra-high-resolution imaging of the Soviet Union in peacetime for missile counting -- and the three groups are going three separate ways in replacing the KH-12. The KH-12 was meant to serve all three groups, but this would create irreconcilable differences in priorities in a time of crisis. The final nail in the KH-12's coffin was the shuttle problems. So the CIA and friends are pushing for a big new satellite for arms control, the USAF wants a different big-satellite system for targeting Soviet mobile missiles for the B-2, and the tactical users are pushing Lightsat. In addition to DARPA's Lightsat, which is currently fighting to keep its budget, both the USN and the USAF recently started small-satellite projects. DARPA has awarded a contract to Defense Systems Inc to build a small constellation of experimental comsats; one or more of them will go up on the first Pegasus launch. DARPA has paid OSC+Hercules $6.3M for the first Pegasus launch, and has an option on another at the same price. These are firm fixed prices; "we're buying the services, not developing the vehicle", they say. DARPA *is* funding development of a small conventional launcher, with a major contract award due in Sept. DARPA says that it is not going to be a bulk customer for small launches on either launcher, since its job is to demonstrate technology for use by other military agencies. Discovery is pretty much ready to go. The shaft-travel problem in one of the pumps is now known to have been a false alarm (measurement error). The fix for the nitrogen-tetroxide leak is in place and is being pressure tested (succesfully, so far). The trace hydrogen leak in the orbiter/ET umbilical cavity is still a bit of a mystery, but it may have been there from the beginning -- this is the first time the cavity has been instrumented during an engine firing. The leading theory is that the seals in an auxiliary hydrogen line leak momentarily when they are suddenly chilled by the start of hydrogen flow. Amsat, the US amateur-radio satellite group, will deploy a US-built small satellite from Mir late next year. The satellite's job will be medical communications in remote areas; the ground side of it is a joint project of Soviet scientists and a Harvard group. The satellite will weigh less than 10 kg, and will go up on a Soyuz or Progress launch for deployment during an EVA. This is basically a demonstration mission; if more are built, they will go up in more orthodox ways on expendable boosters. The Soviets have agreed to do the deployment at no charge; approval for the project has come from very high levels. The satellite will need US export clearance, but it is hoped that this will not be a major problem. The US government is lukewarm about the whole thing because the Harvard group is on the wrong side of the political fence. NASA picks TRW to build AXAF (the Advanced X-ray Astrophysics Facility, the Hubble telescope's X-ray counterpart). NASA is trying to learn from its mistakes on Hubble, which had no single prime contractor (leading to coordination problems) and some extremely tight technical requirements, the result being a huge budget overrun. The AXAF approach is to build the high-risk parts first, before getting the bulk of the program rolling. AXAF is meant for shuttle launch. Charles Pellerin (NASA astrophysics boss) says he prefers the shuttle over expendables: he has no tight launch windows, he wants the most reliable launcher possible, and he values on-orbit servicing. Morton Thiokol settles out of court with Jane Smith, widow of Challenger's pilot. Reagan signs appropriations bill giving NASA $10.7G for FY89, $800M less than requested. The space station is well funded, but much of its funding is on hold until the next president okays it. Two Navy navsats launched from Vandenberg by Scout Aug 24. Big story on the Phobos missions and their landers: a fixed-base lander on each Phobos, and the "hopper" on Phobos 2. [Just as well it's on P2, since P1 is out of touch and believed defunct due to a command error that switched off its attitude-control system.] The lander missions are rather high-risk, because Phobos is rather irregular and its surface is not well known. For example, if the fixed lander is partly in shadow this will cut its life short, since it has little power to spare and there wasn't time to develop software for "smart" power management. Soviets study use of a satellite to deploy balloons into the middle of typhoons and hurricanes. [In itself unimportant, but it points out once again that the Soviets have what we lack: routine access to space. They can use space-based systems whenever it's convenient, not just when it's absolutely necessary.] Soviets studying Western suggestion to use Energia to put a multipurpose satellite network into Mars orbit for navigation and communications relay for landers, rovers, etc. Unfavorable comparisons made between Soviet willingness to listen to such notions and NASA's we-know-what's-best attitude. The Soviets had proposed a choice between heavyweight landers etc using Energia and medium-weight ones using Proton. The Westerners suggested staying with medium landers but using Energia's heavylift capability for a satellite network. The network's support services could make it possible for Japan or ESA (or even -- horrors! -- the US) to mount effective Mars missions using their smaller launchers. -- NASA is into artificial | Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology stupidity. - Jerry Pournelle | uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry henry@zoo.toronto.edu ------------------------------ End of SPACE Digest V8 #379 *******************