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Latest Updates from NASA on IMAGE Recovery
by Miles Hatfield for GSFC News
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 17, 2018

illustration only

As signal strength improves and data is again captured, IMAGE is not reliably responding to commands. Since loss of contact on Feb. 24, 2018, IMAGE's signal has remained too weak to retrieve data.

Just after midnight on May 9, however, Scott Tilley - the amateur astronomer who first rediscovered IMAGE - noticed that the spacecraft unexpectedly began transmitting a strong signal once again.

By morning that day, engineers at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Wallops Island, Virginia, NASA's White Sands Test Facility in New Mexico, and The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab in Laurel, Maryland, had locked on to the signal, and are still receiving telemetry from the spacecraft today.

Commands were successfully sent to IMAGE on May 9 from Wallops Island. However, only a small fraction of the commands sent were acknowledged by the spacecraft. It is unknown why IMAGE did not receive the bulk of them.

The spacecraft is still transmitting from its medium-gain antenna, indicating that last month's attempts to switch to its low-gain omnidirectional antenna were unsuccessful. Since reestablishing contact on May 9, multiple attempts have been made to command IMAGE from the White Sands WS1 antenna without success.

Why the signal faded or why it came back remains a mystery, although current theories include spacecraft attitude drift or thermal effects.


Related Links
Archived NASA mission website for IMAGE
Space Technology News - Applications and Research


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TECH SPACE
NASA seeks research proposals for space technologies to flight test
Washington DC (SPX) Apr 30, 2018
NASA's Space Technology Mission Directorate's Flight Opportunities program is seeking research proposals for promising space technologies that benefit future NASA space exploration missions. Selected technologies from industry and academia will be flight-tested on commercial suborbital launch vehicles, reduced gravity aircraft and high-altitude balloon flights. The Flight Opportunities program strategically invests in the growth of the commercial spaceflight market while helping advance technologi ... read more

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