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 Pete Theisinger, project
manager for the Mars Rover mission uses a model of the NASA Mars Spirit Rover
while briefing reporters the its status January 23.
PASADENA, the United States, Jan. 23 (Xinhuanet) - US
Mars rover re-established communication with Earth for 20 minutes on Friday, but
scientists are still trying to find what had happened on the spacecraft, NASA
said.
"The spacecraft sent limited data
in a proper response to a ground command, and we're planning for commanding
further communication sessions later today," said Mars Exploration Rover Project
Manager Pete Theisinger at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL in Pasadena,
California.
Since Wednesday, its 19th day on Mars, the rover lost
contact with Earth, sending back only meaningless radio noise or simple beeps
acknowledging receipt of commands.
JPL said the flight team for Spirit sent a command to
the roverat 5:02 a.m., Friday, via the NASA Deep Space Network antenna complex
near Madrid, Spain, telling it to begin transmitting. They received data at a
slow rate of 120 bits per second in a 20-minutecommunication session that began
at 5:26 a.m.
Dave Hurst with JPL's newsroom said NASA scientists
still did not know what had happened on the rover and were working to establish
communication with the spacecraft at higher data transmitting rate.
On Thursday, NASA said the flight team had telemetry
problems in communicating with Spirit. At first, the problems were believedto be
related to a thunderstorm over Australia. But later NASA said the problems
apparently were more serious and could representa software or hardware failure.
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