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FUSE
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Mission Status Report
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Mission Status Report #77 Star Date: October 11, 2004
Rough Hurricane Season in the Carribean
Caption: In late August 2004, Hurricane Francis rumbles just northeast of Puerto Rico, where
the primary FUSE ground station is located (in Mayaguez). Image from the
MODIS instrument on the TERRA satellite.
(Photo courtesy NASA.)
(Click image above to see larger version.)
Operations on the FUSE satellite continue to go well since my
last report, although not without some challenges.
You may recall that the primary
FUSE ground station is located at the University of
Puerto Rico, Mayaguez, on the western coast of the island. With the
active hurricane season this year, it has been a bit nerve-wracking watching monster
hurricanes bouncing around the Carribean, wreaking havoc as they went. While no direct
hits were taken by Puerto Rico, we were reminded that it doesn't take a direct hit
to cause significant problems. Heavy rains and thunderstorms associated with hurricane
Francis (shown above) caused widespread power outages and took our ground station
off line. Later in September, a direct lightning strike during a storm spawned by
hurricane Jeanne knocked out several key pieces of electronic equipment (despite the
usual safeguards that were in place), and caused us to scramble to get the ground station
back on line. Special thanks go to our colleagues at the University of Puerto Rico
for their heroic efforts on out behalf, and for the techicians at Honeywell Technical
Services, Inc. (HTSI), who made an important house call to the ground station
to effect repairs.
In another interesting turn of events, although operations continue unabated, FUSE has
developed problems with another one of its ring-laser gyroscopes. You may recall, FUSE
has two "Inertial Reference Units" (IRUs) each of which contains three gyros. When a first
gyro went bad in IRU-A, we switched over to the IRU-B package. We then developed new
flight control software that could work with less than three gyros (and NO gyros, if that
time ever comes). This new software was loaded to the spacecraft in April 2003, and
thoroughly tested. As reported in Status Report #70, when
we lost a gyro in IRU-B in late July 2003, we kept right on operating with only two active
gyros in the control loop. That's the way we operated until just recently.
Over the summer, analysis of detailed pointing data during science observations started
to show an increase in what we call pointing jitter, which is the small scale pointing
errors that occur all the time. Although not at a level that it would affect the
quality of science data, we nonetheless started efforts to try and understand where
the jitter was arising within the control system. It turns out that a second gyro in
IRU-B has shown a degradation in performance to the point that, by mid-September 2004
it was causing difficulties to target acquisitions. This behavior is entirely different
from the other gyros that failed, which worked perfectly right up to when they finally
stopped operationing. After some final attempts to clear up the problem we decided
to remove the problem gyro from the control loop on Sept. 28, 2004. We have continued
operating, now in single-gyro mode, since that time, and have seen no ill-effects.
But we are watching things very closely as we continue normal science operations.
Such is life with an aging satellite!
The deadline for Cycle 6 FUSE proposals was Sept. 17, 2004. NASA received a record
number of new proposals for potential observation in Cycle 6, for a record amount of
requested time. Competition will be stiff, but we take this as a good sign that
the astronomical community still holds a keen interest in new FUSE observations!
Proposal selections will be made later this fall with results announced near the
end of the year. Good luck to those who proposed!
Reported by: Bill Blair, FUSE Chief of Observatory Operations
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