It is done: Spirit will RIP on the Martian surface

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The last communication from the Mars Rover Spirit was on March 22, 2010. A few moments ago NASA announced that there would be no more attempts to contact the space robot after a transmission that will end on May 25th.

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It is suspected that Spirit’s internal circuitry was damaged by very low temperatures experienced during the Martian winter. While it was hoped that solar panels would allow heaters to bring the robot back to life, this apparently has not happened. The resources that would be needed to continue what seems to be a fruitless attempt at communication are now needed elsewhere. According to NASA,

Engineers’ assessments in recent months have shown a very low probability for recovering communications with Spirit. Communications assets that have been used by the Spirit mission in the past, including NASA’s Deep Space Network of antennas on Earth, plus two NASA Mars orbiters that can relay communications, now are needed to prepare for NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory mission. MSL is scheduled to launch later this year.

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10 thoughts on “It is done: Spirit will RIP on the Martian surface

  1. I bet there’s a lot of mourning at NASA.

    Remember the poignant eulogy to the first Mars lander in The Planetary Report?

  2. Computerized mechanisms don’t have souls; I doubt humans have souls.

    But Spirit gave worked longer and harder, and provided more fodder for science, than anyone had any reason to expect. If a human gave such a generous return on so small an investment, under such lousy conditions we would say they had a lot of heart, grit and determination. We would declare them a hero.

    Spirit may not have had a lot of smarts or independent creativity, but it had heart. It is, and always will be, a heroic inspiration.

    I get he feeling that one day, perhaps years from now, when the resources are free and some smart-assed intern points it to in the right direction on a lark there will be a faint signal of a forlorn robotic explorer requesting orders.

    And in a decade, or ten, when we land humans on Mars, they will wander out on a lark and find the brave little explorer and erect a cairn.

  3. Very well said, Art. Maybe someday after we’ve gone to Mars our kids will visit the Smithsonian and see Spirit in a well-deserved place of honor.

  4. Wow. I feel like a friend has died. I hope they build you and your brother (sister?) a statue on the Washington DC Mall.

    Kudos to NASA for getting it right (unlike the abysmally stupid and wasteful ISS and shuttle programs).

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