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NASA Mars Mission Postponed Due To Spacecraft Leak
The instrument involved is a French seismometer that is created to measure ground movements as small as the diameter of an atom. “The decision follows unsuccessful attempts to fix an air leak on a key component of the mission’s science payload”. Following the discovery of minuscule leaks in a vacuum sphere that contains the lander’s seismic instrument, NASA has been forced to delay the mission by at least two years.
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However, it requires a vacuum seal around its three main sensors to withstand the harsh conditions of the Martian environment.
The seemingly minor problem apparently has rather major implications, as the previously scheduled launch date of March 2016 will no longer be possible.
“We just don’t have enough time to find the leak, fix it and still make it to the launch pad in March”, John Grunsfeld, NASA associate administrator for science, said during a phone call with reporters. With the suspension of the mission, the spacecraft will be returned to Lockheed’s facility in Denver.
NASA planetary sciences division director Jim Green was quoted by Reuter, saying that the cost of the InSight mission, including launch and data analysis, has shot up from an initial $425m to $675m.
“We’re not giving up resolving NASA Mars Insight lander instrument leak [sic]”, CNES president Jean-Yves Le Gall said in an interview with SpaceNews.
Mars will give a better understanding of Earth’s early development because the crust and the mantle of the red planet have been undisturbed as compared to Earth.
The termination raises concerns concerning the potential of the study work because it is likely to be another 26 weeks before Mars and Planet are positively aimed to get a start.
NASA insists the delayed launch of the InSight does not jeopardize NASA’s overall goal of reaching Mars, although Mars enthusiasts are taking the news rather hard.
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However, the space agency stated that the cancellation of InSight mission would not affect other Mars missions. There’s more on these power systems in another NASA video here. The mission will launch during the period March 4 to March 30, 2016, and land on Mars Sept. 28, 2016.