Quote from: Jamie D on April 05, 2012, 02:35:49 AM
Three words:
Mars Climate Orbiter
That was part of the "Faster, Better, Cheaper" fleet of spacecraft that met their doom. As with the Mars Climate Orbiter, it was the simple conversion from English measurements to metric that was not done that spelled its doom. Also the Mars Polar Lander, the aeroshell didn't separate during entry into the Martian atmosphere. Genesis spacecraft made it back to earth after collecting solar wind particles, but crash landed in a briny puddle in the salt flats caused by the explosive bolts for parachute deployment being inserted backwards! Data was retrieved from some of the broken silicon wafers though. Possibly the same problem with the Mars Polar Lander mishap. Similar explosive bolts were used on that aeroshell as well.
The director of the Lockheed Martin Denver plant came to our club meeting with hat in hand and apologized for these mishaps shortly after they happened and frankly explained these mishaps. That fellow has got my respect. Those L-M plant workers affectionately called that place "Fort Fumble" long before these mishaps.
It was the miscorrection of the mirror of the HST that really saved the space shuttle. Four servicing missions corrected the problem and improvements were made with each mission. This observatory was designed to be serviced by the shuttle. The last service mission was to be scrubbed, but the popular outcry got funding plus a safety waiver to service it. The next service mission will be done robotically to either service it or drag it down for a safe reentry over the Pacific.
Voyagers 1&2 are still operating at the edge of the Solar System sending solar and stellar wind data as it goes through the heliopause, the boundary where the solar wind flux meets the stellar wind of our galaxy. The solar wind flux varies causing the changes at that boundary.
Joelene