ASU Mars instrument gets new lease on life as NASA extends Mars Odyssey mission
PRESS RELEASE Date Released: Monday, October 13, 2008 Source: Arizona State University - Comments
TEMPE, Ariz. - A six-minute rocket firing on September 30 has put NASA's Mars
Odyssey
spacecraft on track for a new orbit around the Red Planet. The change, part of a
two-year
extension for the mission, will give an ASU-operated instrument carried on
Odyssey
greater sensitivity for mapping Martian minerals. The instrument is the Thermal
Emission
Imaging System (THEMIS), a multi-band heat-sensing camera operated by ASU's Mars
Space Flight Facility.
"The orbital change lets THEMIS operate at its maximum potential," says Philip
Christensen
of ASU's School of Earth and Space Exploration, part of the College of Liberal
Arts and
Sciences. Christensen designed THEMIS and is the instrument's principal
investigator. "In
the months to come, we expect to see a steady increase in the camera's ability
to detect
and map minerals on the planet's surface."
Odyssey's orbit is synchronized with the Sun. For the five years before the
Sept. 30 orbital
maneuver, the local solar time on Mars was about 5 p.m. wherever the spacecraft
was
flying over as it made its dozen passes a day moving from north to south.
Similarly, the
local time was 5 a.m. under the spacecraft as it flew the south-to-north leg of
each orbit.
Slow drift through time
The push from the Sept. 30 maneuver will gradually change that synchronization
over the
next year or so. Its effect is that the time of day on the ground when Odyssey
passes
overhead is now getting earlier by about 20 seconds per day. A follow-up
maneuver,
probably in late 2009 when the overpass time is between 2:30 and 3:00 p.m., will
end the
drift toward earlier times of day.