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Stardust, NASA's Comet-Hunting Spaceship, Shuts Down

Stardust Nasa

By DAN ELLIOTT   03/25/11 04:29 AM ET   AP

DENVER -- With the click of a mouse, Sandy Freund Kasper sent a command to NASA's comet-hunting Stardust space probe to burn all its fuel, starting a sequence that would shut the spacecraft down after a 12-year run.

"Like saying goodbye to a friend," said Allan Cheuvront, the Stardust program manager for Lockheed Martin, who has worked on the probe since 1996, when it was still in the design stage.

"It's been an amazing spacecraft," he said Thursday. "It's done everything we asked, it's done it perfectly."

Launched in 1999, Stardust finished its main mission in 2006, sending a tiny sample of particles from the Wild 2 comet to Earth via a parachute-equipped canister. NASA then recycled the probe, sending it past a comet last month to photograph a crater left by a projectile launched by another space probe.

It accomplished one last experiment on Thursday, firing its thrusters until its last hydrazine fuel was gone. The length of that burn, a little under 2 1/2 minutes, will tell engineers exactly how much fuel was left so they can see how accurate their calculations were.

That in turn will help with the design and operation of future probes.

It will take a few days to analyze the fuel data, said Jim Neuman, a mission operations manager for Lockheed Martin, which built and operated the probe for NASA.

Freund Kasper was serving as the Stardust "ace" Thursday, sending commands to the spacecraft from a big room in Lockheed Martin's Denver complex that looked more like a set from "The Office" than a 21st century mission control.

A dozen or so engineers peered at computer screens in low-walled cubicles. Tape dispensers, beige telephones and three-ring binders lined the work stations. There was a dollar-a-head office pool, with 60 or so names scrawled on a whiteboard with their best guesses on how much fuel Stardust had left.

Before Freund Kasper sent Stardust its final instruction, Cheuvront polled eight or nine other engineers at work stations labeled "Power," "Thermal," "Propulsion" and other roles, asking each in turn if the probe was ready.

Then he turned to Don Brownlee of the University of Washington, the lead scientist on Stardust's primary mission to take samples from the Wild 2 comet.

"It's been a wonderful and overwhelming experience," Brownlee said.

At 4:41 p.m. MDT, Freund Kasper sent a command instructing Stardust to begin executing a set of instructions that had been transmitted to the probe earlier in the day.

About 42 minutes later – the time it took the command to travel the roughly 93 million miles to Stardust, and for Stardust's reply to reach Earth – the engineers' computer screens showed the burn was under way.

Once the fuel was gone, Stardust lost its ability to keep its antennas pointed toward Earth, and the control room lost radio contact at 5:33 p.m.

If the probe executed all of its final orders as expected, it put itself in "safe mode," turning most of its systems off, at 6:13 p.m., about 1 1/2 hours after the last command was sent.

With no fuel, Stardust can't keep its solar panels aimed at the sun, and once its batteries are drained it will shut down for good.

Stardust will be left in an orbit around the sun. Engineers project that in the next 100 years, Stardust won't get any closer than 1.7 million miles of Earth's orbit or 13 million miles of Mars' orbit.

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DENVER -- With the click of a mouse, Sandy Freund Kasper sent a command to NASA's comet-hunting Stardust space probe to burn all its fuel, starting a sequence that would shut the spacecraft down after...
DENVER -- With the click of a mouse, Sandy Freund Kasper sent a command to NASA's comet-hunting Stardust space probe to burn all its fuel, starting a sequence that would shut the spacecraft down after...
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JaxReader
Charity is no substitute for justice withheld.
05:45 PM on 03/28/2011
Bye little guy! Thanks for spying on the comets for us! If you meet any aliens don't tell em' which rock you're from.
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11:55 PM on 03/27/2011
So, a million years from now some spacefaring race is going to find this thing and power it back up.

Then, they will wonder why we spent so much time taking pictures of potatoes.
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cats22
Minds are like books; best used when opened
08:07 PM on 03/27/2011
Goodbye old friend. Thank you. Hopefully, humankind will follow you into space.
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WorkhelpWorkhelp
Control your money locally. Charter banks now.
01:10 AM on 03/28/2011
Well, You ARE in space....
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cats22
Minds are like books; best used when opened
06:29 PM on 03/28/2011
I'm sorry, I'm not understanding you clearly. Are you sassing me?
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SilentSolidarity
So what do you need? Besides a miracle.
02:32 PM on 03/27/2011
Comet hunting. Hey no jokes about that. In 100 years, this might be a very cost-effective way to get rare metals.

I can already see some people in the future selling 1999 vintage satellites to trillionaires and space cowboys or something.
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11:56 PM on 03/27/2011
I was Comet hunting today....under the sink.
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01:20 PM on 03/27/2011
This is like nuclear reactors. They can and do kill us, but we don't really believe it. Not looking for E.L.E.s is the same thing. They are coming but we don't want to know, and we don't really believe in them anyway.
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05:24 AM on 03/29/2011
with Mahuika Crater, Burckle Crater, and the Gulf of Carpentaria impacts all withing the last 5000 years, the earth will likely get blasted again , and soon
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mahuika_crater
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burckle_Crater
http://www.activeboard.com/forum.spark?aBID=58381&p=3&topicID=33864155
http://www.sott.net/articles/show/222851-Apocalypse-Forever-The-Root-of-Islam-Was-a-Very-Dark-Year

the remnants of the holocene impact can be traced back from the carolina bays to a point at Hoosier Hill in Indiana, where the center of the impact's earth rebounded. the blast wave affect out to 100miles in a SE oval shape, the NE curve being near Lima, Ft Wayne, and Colombus. a terminal ridge of debris still remains visible there. can even be partially seen on yahoo maps

http://maps.yahoo.com/#mvt=s&lat=39.659519&lon=-84.998357&zoom=7&q1=hoosier%20hill
11:42 AM on 03/27/2011
Boehner's tan - a waste of money
Comet exploration - money well-spent to know more about things that could possibly destroy life as we know it
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05:26 AM on 03/29/2011
ever heard of Elenin?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LpStW8u5RF0
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MartiniVirtuoso
Outspoken on equality
11:06 AM on 03/27/2011
Oh, don't be sad. The spacecraft will come back to us one day...along with an army of robotic conquerors that evolved once it crashed on a planet where life was just beginning, all looking for their creator and destroying the carbon units inhabiting the creator's planet Earth. Our ancestors will be slaves of the descendants of this spacecraft, so don't cry. We'll be reunited one day.

(Just joking...added so that no one thinks I'm crazy like some I've seen making comments on here.)
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Henk
I like your Christ, I don't like your Christians..
11:41 AM on 03/27/2011
Oh, I thought you were totally serious. Its a lot more fun if you leave the qualifier off.

But me, I will be "Raptured" away long before you heathens would be taken hostage by mutant robots. That's why I wear clean underwear.
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bbriani3842
400+ yrs of science & STILL no evidence for a god
04:14 PM on 03/27/2011
But you forgot one thing -- The initial surprise of being "raptured" would immediately cause you to soil yourself ...
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jcarterla
There ain't no shame in my game!
06:46 AM on 03/27/2011
Is comet hunting season over already?
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bbriani3842
400+ yrs of science & STILL no evidence for a god
04:14 PM on 03/27/2011
Sure! Didjya get your bag limit?
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bigshotprof
Pre-moderated for your protection
05:43 AM on 03/27/2011
So a few months before the Mayan calendar resets and presages chaos and global destruction, a satellite that searches for "comets" "shuts down?" I think we all know what's going on here and we'd better start hoarding our dried food and duct tape!

(I just wanted to beat the tin hats to the punch. :)
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SilentSolidarity
So what do you need? Besides a miracle.
02:33 PM on 03/27/2011
You know the Windows calendar stops at 2099. Maybe people will make a big deal out of this, too. I'll tell you about it if I reach 110.
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democrats for life
republicans need not apply
05:25 AM on 03/27/2011
it's too bad Bush blew the wad, now everyone, including NASA suffers dearly
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bbriani3842
400+ yrs of science & STILL no evidence for a god
04:15 PM on 03/27/2011
But it was your money! Gore would've just put in that "lock box" ...
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Jim Pasterczyk
Banned!
04:43 AM on 03/27/2011
Seems like they could have left the fuel in it and done other things with the probe as long as it was still working and still gotten their data on amount of fuel left. Seems like such a pity to send a probe all that way and then just discard it.
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MichaelMcKLA
I'm moving to Pandora.
03:32 AM on 03/27/2011
Cool mission, NASA. Well done.
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kilchis
We're all in this together
03:11 AM on 03/27/2011
We're all gonna die! No,really we are.
10:24 AM on 03/27/2011
Well, there's a book called "Sex in the Afterlife". So if you ain't gettin' any now, maybe you can do better after you die.
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Henk
I like your Christ, I don't like your Christians..
11:46 AM on 03/27/2011
Most people never realize that everyday they live brings them one step closer. That's a good thing, because REpublicans want us to work right up to that final day. If they realized that, a lot of poeple might not be so docile as they make that daily march to the untimate end. Oh well, have a nice day.
12:47 AM on 03/27/2011
Saying goodbye is so hard to do.
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Sam Ellens
11:28 PM on 03/26/2011
CORRECTION: It must be more than 93 million miles. 93 million miles is the distance to the sun - and a round trip would take ~16.6 minutes
04:31 AM on 03/27/2011
correction: thats the amount of time it takes light to reach the earth,not to send a radio/microwave signal...check your facts better before posting...
09:34 AM on 03/27/2011
radio/microwaves travel the speed of light.... check your facts before posting
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Sam Ellens
08:27 PM on 03/28/2011
HAHAHA! That's hilarious.