Updated: 7/3/2003; 9:05:10 PM.
Larry Kellogg's Radio Weblog
Promoting Space Science and the New Space Frontier
        

Tuesday, February 25, 2003

Pioneer 10 Spacecraft Sends Last Signal

After more than 30 years, it appears the venerable Pioneer 10
spacecraft has sent its last signal to Earth. Pioneer's last, very weak
signal was received on Jan. 22, 2003. NASA engineers report Pioneer
10's radioisotope power source has decayed, and it may not have
enough power to send additional transmissions to Earth. NASA's
Deep Space Network (DSN) did not detect a signal during the last
contact attempt Feb. 7, 2003. The previous three contacts, including
the Jan. 22 signal, were very faint with no telemetry received. The last
time a Pioneer 10 contact returned telemetry data was April 27, 2002.

NASA has no additional contact attempts planned for Pioneer 10.

Full Story - http://amesnews.arc.nasa.gov/releases/2003/03_25HQ.html
(also at http://www.nasa.gov/HP_news_03082.html  and text only version
ftp://ftp.hq.nasa.gov/pub/pao/pressrel/2003/03-082.txt  ) - LRK -


6:46:06 PM    comment []

NASA Studies Ways to Fix Shuttle in Space

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/science/AP-Shuttle-Investigation.html

 


6:44:05 PM    comment []

http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99993421

Scientists simulating meteorite impacts on the frozen oceans of Europa have made an electrifying discovery, which raises the chances of finding life on Jupiter's moon

'Shocking' discovery boosts chance of life on Europa
09:38 21 February 03
NewScientist.com news service
 

Scientists simulating meteorite impacts on the frozen oceans of Europa have made an electrifying discovery, which raises the chances of finding life on Jupiter's moon.

Jerome Borucki, at the NASA Ames Research Center in California, and his colleagues fired aluminium bullets into a block of ice. They found that when the bullet impacted, sensors embedded in the ice detected an electric shock. A second, and much larger, electrical discharge was observed a few moments later.

A shell of ice many kilometres thick encases the surface of Europa and scientists speculate that liquid water - and therefore life - might lie beneath. Evidence for the presence of the molecular building blocks for life comes from the yellow-brown stains seen on the ice by the Galileo probe.

"Europa is a high priority target for exploration because the key ingredients for life seem to be there. But even if you have the ingredients, the question is, is there a spark that creates the first organic molecules?" says Ron Greeley, a planetary scientist at the Arizona State University.

Borucki's bullet experiments suggest meteorite impacts might have provided that spark. The electric shock had gone undetected because no-one had put sensors below an impact crater before, he told New Scientist. The team think the current is caused by the movement of protons as the ice cracks.

snip


7:09:44 AM    comment []

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