Title :
In-Flight Anomalies and Lessons Learned from the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Mission
Author_Institution :
Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA
Abstract :
The Mars reconnaissance orbiter mission has as its primary objectives: advance our understanding of the current Mars climate, the processes that have formed and modified the surface of the planet, and the extent to which water has played a role in surface processes; identify sites of possible aqueous activity indicating environments that may have been or are conducive to biological activity; and thus, identify and characterize sites for future landed missions; and provide forward and return relay services for current and future Mars landed assets. MRO´s crucial role in the long term strategy for Mars exploration requires a high level of reliability during its 5.4 year mission. This requires an architecture which incorporates extensive redundancy and cross-strapping. The overall MRO architecture is discussed in this context. Because of the distances and hence light- times involved, the spacecraft itself must be able to utilize this redundancy in responding to time-critical failures. The architecture of MRO´s semi-autonomous fault protection (FP) software, known as SPIDER (spacecraft imbedded distributed error response), is described. For cases where FP is unable to recognize a potentially threatening condition, either due to known limitations or software flaws, intervention by ground operations is required. Each of MRO´s significant in-flight anomalies is examined, with lessons learned for redundancy and FP architectures and for ground operations.
Keywords :
Mars; aerospace computing; fault tolerant computing; software reliability; space vehicles; MRO semi-autonomous fault protection software; Mars climate; Mars landed assets; Mars reconnaissance orbiter mission; SPIDER; aqueous activity; biological activity; inflight anomalies; software flaws; spacecraft imbedded distributed error response; time-critical failures; Computer architecture; Mars; Planetary orbits; Planets; Protection; Reconnaissance; Redundancy; Relays; Space vehicles; Time factors;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 2008 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1487-1
Electronic_ISBN :
1095-323X
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2008.4526483