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Gravity Probe B Update for Nov 19, 2004
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Titre:
Gravity Probe B Update for Nov 19, 2004
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00963380
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Here is the week newsletter from Gravity Probe B.

#----------------------------------------

==============================================
GRAVITY PROBE B MISSION UPDATE FOR 19 NOVEMBER 2004
==============================================
As of mission day #213, the GP-B spacecraft remains in good health and is continuing to perform well. We have been collecting science data for 83 days, and data acquisition process is proceeding as expected. The spacecraft is maintaining a constant roll rate of 0.7742 rpm (77.5 seconds per revolution), and it is flying drag-free around gyro #3. The Dewar's internal temperature remains steady at just under 1.82 kelvin.

At this time of year, the spacecraft is entering a 6-week period where it remains in full sunlight-that is, light from the Sun shines broadside on the spacecraft. As a result, the Dewar's outer shell has been warming up, and some of this heat is transferred to the liquid helium inside. Because the temperature and pressure inside the Dewar are maintained at constant levels, this expected seasonal warming of the Dewar causes the helium inside to boil off at a faster rate. To compensate for this increased helium flow and maintain the correct pointing position, the spacecraft's Attitude and Translation Control system (ATC) has been "null dumping" (uniformly venting) the excess helium out through the micro thruster system.

Last week, we reported that on 10 November 2004, the SQUID Readout (SRE) computer failed a fundamental "health check," which resulted in it's rebooting itself and triggering six protective safemodes that, among other things, halted the spacecraft's on-board timeline, unlocked the telescope from the guide star, closed the telescope shutter, and transitioned all four gyros into analog backup suspension. On first analysis, it appeared that the root cause of this anomalous event was that a high-energy proton had struck a critical memory location in the SRE computer during the severe geomagnetic storm that was raging all last week.

However, further analysis now suggests that the spacecraft did not suffer a new proton hit after all. Rather, the SRE computer had previously suffered high-energy proton hits resulting in multi-bit (not self-correctable) errors in two of its memory locations. These memory locations were thought to be non-critical, but it now appears that one of these affected memory locations was accessed during a routine maintenance procedure. This caused a "health check" pf the SRE computer to fail, which in turn, automatically triggered the safemodes and re-booted the computer. For precautionary purposes, our team had already prepared a procedure to manually reboot the SRE computer and clear out any multi-bit errors, but this will no longer be necessary, since the computer's self-reboot last week cleared and reset all of the computer's memory locations. The fact that this event happened while the spacecraft was entering the South Atlantic Anomaly region of the Earth (where protection from proton bombardment is significantly reduced) during a severe geomagnetic storm, was apparently a coincidence.

Events such as the one that occurred last week always prompt a number of inquiries about whether such glitches cause any loss of scientific data or detriment to the experimental results. The short answer to this question is "no." Such events typically do not-and have not-had any significant effect on the GP-B experimental data or the results. To see why this is so requires a general understanding of how we collect data from the spacecraft, how safemodes work, and in general, how we process and analyze the data. We will cover all of these topics in upcoming GP-B updates.

Please Note: Until further notice, we intend to continue sending out these updates on a weekly basis. Also, from time to time, we may post special reports and special updates, as warranted by mission events.

--
**********************************
NASA - Stanford - Lockheed Martin
Gravity Probe B Program
"Testing Einstein's Universe"
http://einstein.stanford.edu

Bob Kahn
Public Affairs Coordinator

Phone: 650-723-2540
Fax: 650-723-3494
Email: kahn@relgyro.stanford.edu
**********************************

#-------------------------------------------------

Regards,

LelandJ
Leland F. Jackson, CPA
Software - Master (TM)
smvfp@mail.smvfp.com
Software Master TM
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