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Assessment of in-flight anomalies of long life outer plant missionThee unmanned planetary spacecraft to the outer planets have been controlled and operated successfully in space for an accumulated total of 66 years. The Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft each have been in space for more than 26 years. The Galileo spacecraft was in space for 14 years, including eight years in orbit about Jupiter. During the flight operations for these missions, anomalies for the ground data system and the flight systems have been tracked using the anomaly reporting tool at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. A total of 3300 incidents, surprises, and anomaly reports have been recorded in the database. This paper describes methods and results for classifying and identifying trends relative to ground system vs. flight system, software vs. hardware, and corrective actions. There are several lessons learned from these assessments that significantly benefit the design and planning for long life missions of the future. These include the necessity for having redundancy for successful operation of the spacecraft, awareness that anomaly reporting is dependent on mission activity not the age of the spacecraft, and the need for having a program to maintain and transfer operation knowledge and tools to replacement flight team members.
Document ID
20060043569
Acquisition Source
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Document Type
Conference Paper
External Source(s)
Authors
Hoffman, Alan R.
Green, Nelson W.
Garrett, Henry B.
Date Acquired
August 23, 2013
Publication Date
June 15, 2004
Meeting Information
Meeting: European Space Agency 5th International Symposium on Environmental Testing for Space Programmes
Location: Noordwijk
Country: Netherlands
Start Date: June 15, 2004
End Date: June 17, 2004
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
anomalies
spacecraft
environments

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