[meteorite-list] Private Team Hopes to Contact 36-Year-Old NASA Probe This Week (ISEE-3)

Ron Baalke baalke at zagami.jpl.nasa.gov
Mon May 19 19:34:54 EDT 2014


http://www.space.com/25938-private-team-contacting-nasa-isee3-spacecraft.html

Private Team Hopes to Contact 36-Year-Old NASA Probe This Week (ISEE-3)
By Elizabeth Howell
space.com
May 19, 2014

A private crowdfunded team will attempt to make contact with a 1970s-era 
NASA spacecraft this week, the first major step in an  ambitious effort 
to repurpose the retired probe.

Members of the group, which met its $125,000 crowfunding goal last week, 
have traveled to Puerto Rico, where they'll use the powerful Arecibo Observatory 
to beam messages to the International Sun-Earth Explorer 3 probe, or ISEE-3. 
The spacecraft launched in 1978 and ceased science operations in 1997.

The team has raised about $132,000 as of today (May 19). Over the weekend, 
the ISEE-3 Reboot Project extended the fundraising campaign to Friday 
(May 23), asking donors to help meet a "stretch goal" of $150,000. 

The extra money will be used to rent NASA's Deep Space Network scientific 
telecommunications system, which the team will use to stay in touch with 
ISEE-3 spacecraft, project leaders said.

But contacting the spacecraft using the Arecibo Observatory - the world's 
largest single-dish radio telescope - is the first order of business. 
Team members are in Puerto Rico trying to make their hardware work with 
the telescope (which is itself several decades old) and to install a transmitter 
shipped from Germany this week.

"Once we're certain the hardware works - that it can transmit and receive 
and do all the stuff to talk with the spacecraft - then the issue is getting 
everybody into position," said project co-leader Keith Cowing, who is 
remaining behind in Virginia to "pump up" the crowdfunding effort.

Making contact

Cowing and co-leader Dennis Wingo are receiving no funding from NASA to 
work with the spacecraft, but on Friday (May 16) they signed a Space Act 
Agreement with the agency. 

A private group has never contacted a spacecraft before, and Cowing said 
everyone wanted to be sure that things were "done right." The pact covers 
matters such as how the group will contact the spacecraft, what they plan 
to do with it and what the data will be used for.

The ISEE-3 probe has had an itinerant life since entering space in 1978. 
It originally examined the solar wind and cosmic rays, then chased two 
comets (including Halley's Comet) in the mid-1980s, then was a sun probe 
from 1991 until 1997, when it was put into hibernation.

Making contact is a challenge because there is no computer on board, requiring 
the team to seek out old documents to figure out how to get in touch with 
the spacecraft.

"It doesn't even have a thermostat. It hasn't had a [working] battery 
for 20 years," Cowing said.

The team plans to "talk" to the probe to see which of its 13 instruments 
are functioning, and then to redirect its path so that it swings around 
the far side of the moon. Team members will need to make sure the solar-powered 
ISEE-3 survives this maneuver, which will take it beyond the reach of 
sunlight for a spell.

The group plans to redirect the probe from its current orbit around the 
sun to the Earth-sun Lagrange Point 1 (ES-1), a gravitationally stable 
spot about 930,000 miles (1.5 million kilometers) from Earth. But it's 
unclear what the spacecraft's ultimate fate will be; Cowing said they'll 
worry about that later.

"It's a lot easier to have discussions with folks with a spacecraft you 
have saved than one you have not yet," he said.

Cowing, a former NASA employee himself, is also co-leading the Lunar Orbiter 
Image Recovery Project, which is digitizing original analog tapes from 
five robotic spacecraft that went to the moon in 1966 and 1967. He credits 
that effort (which he also heads with Wingo) for helping him think creatively 
about contacting ISEE-3.

"The more we tried, the more we discovered we could do this," he said. 
"You could reverse-engineer stuff. You could buy parts, which were still 
out there. People kept this stuff in their garages."

While a lot of hard work lies ahead, Cowing says he's been honored by 
the help and support of many former NASA workers, as well as the hundreds 
of people who supported the team financially. Many of those funders are 
not self-professed space geeks, he added, saying that perhaps NASA and 
other space entities should bear that in mind when doing public outreach.

"When I would see them [funders] tweet something, I'd always go back and 
follow them from the official Twitter account. These are people with like 
three or four followers; they're virgin. It's astonishing. And they're 
saying this is so cool, what we are doing," Cowing said.

"Everyone who donates now feels that they have a personal stake in our 
success," he added, "and that they get to celebrate when we make it work."

First contact is expected this week. Updates will be available at the 
ISEE-3 blog at http://spacecollege.org/isee3/.



More information about the Meteorite-list mailing list