If the heatshield separated ahead of time, then that would clear the radar and point the finger at software and/or IMU/accelerometers.
If the heatshield separated ahead of time, then that would clear the radar and point the finger at software and/or IMU/accelerometers.
The decision to jettison the heat shield could also have been based on the altitude reported by the radar.
Bob Clark
Just saw this on another forum:
http://www.spiegel.de/wissenschaft/...-liess-schiaparelli-abstuerzen-a-1118370.html
It states the cause of the crash was a communication error between the radar altimeter and the navigation computer.
Just saw this on another forum:
http://www.spiegel.de/wissenschaft/...-liess-schiaparelli-abstuerzen-a-1118370.html
It states the cause of the crash was a communication error between the radar altimeter and the navigation computer.
Google translation:
https://translate.google.com/transl...-liess-schiaparelli-abstuerzen-a-1118370.html
Bob Clark
True but the word "cause" is also left out of the translation.
Bob Clark
Yes, because Google can't detect context. it worked that way:
"At which (place called) software error the (place called) crash is exactly, still needs to be clarified."
If you know, those aren't locations, but things, you know "an etwas liegen" applies and it is about causality.
If you assume it is about locations, it is "an einen Ort liegen", which translates poorly to "to be at".
German is really no easy language, especially not for stupid machines.
Nothing new at this point, the first report by the software developers is expected this week, a final report should come next week. Especially important: Its about two software components, it is no hardware issue.
Should this prove correct, it is a very very bad day for the software developers and their project managers at ESA. A proper test and verification strategy should have caught the bug before launch.
New candidate for most expensive computer bug ever?
Key meeting to weigh Mars crash report
Engineers are close to identifying the cause of the crash that destroyed the Schiaparelli lander on Mars last month.
The European Space Agency’s director general said he expected to have at least an interim report for member states when they meet to discuss future plans in a fortnight’s time.
18 November 2016
The ExoMars orbiter is preparing to make its first scientific observations at Mars during two orbits of the planet starting next week.
The parachute deployed normally at an altitude of 12 km and a speed of 1730 km/h. The vehicle’s heatshield, having served its purpose, was released at an altitude of 7.8 km.
As Schiaparelli descended under its parachute, its radar Doppler altimeter functioned correctly and the measurements were included in the guidance, navigation and control system. However, saturation – maximum measurement – of the Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) had occurred shortly after the parachute deployment. The IMU measures the rotation rates of the vehicle. Its output was generally as predicted except for this event, which persisted for about one second – longer than would be expected.
When merged into the navigation system, the erroneous information generated an estimated altitude that was negative – that is, below ground level. This in turn successively triggered a premature release of the parachute and the backshell, a brief firing of the braking thrusters and finally activation of the on-ground systems as if Schiaparelli had already landed. In reality, the vehicle was still at an altitude of around 3.7 km.
29 November 2016
ESA’s new ExoMars orbiter has tested its suite of instruments in orbit for the first time, hinting at a great potential for future observations.
Arsia Chasmata
The Trace Gas Orbiter, or TGO, a joint endeavour between ESA and Roscosmos, arrived at Mars on 19 October. Its elliptical orbit takes it from 230–310 km above the surface to around 98 000 km every 4.2 days.