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Apparently, one of the solar arrays on the Lucy spacecraft failed to fully deploy.
https://scitechdaily.com/nasas-lucy...problematic-solar-array-is-75-to-95-deployed/
The fault may not be fatal. They may have enough solar power to complete the mission.
At the same time, the James Web Space telescope is said to have 300 single-point failure modes. See the video.
When I first heard that, I thought it foolish to even hope for successful deployment. So many failure modes, the inability to test in a true space environment, the complexity, the inability to send repair missions in case of a failure.
But I do not believe those NASA engineers to be fools. If they are confident of success, they must have good reasons. The trouble on Lucy rattles my optimism a bit, but does not destroy it.
So, the most suspenseful science/engineering story since Apollo 11 and Apollo 13 is coming in December. I for one will be sitting on the edge of my chair for 29 days. @mfb seems to have his finger on space news. Perhaps he'll start a thread in December that keeps us posted on developments.
By the way, 29 days is not the complete story. It will be years before James Webb is fully operational.
https://scitechdaily.com/nasas-lucy...problematic-solar-array-is-75-to-95-deployed/
The fault may not be fatal. They may have enough solar power to complete the mission.
At the same time, the James Web Space telescope is said to have 300 single-point failure modes. See the video.
When I first heard that, I thought it foolish to even hope for successful deployment. So many failure modes, the inability to test in a true space environment, the complexity, the inability to send repair missions in case of a failure.
But I do not believe those NASA engineers to be fools. If they are confident of success, they must have good reasons. The trouble on Lucy rattles my optimism a bit, but does not destroy it.
So, the most suspenseful science/engineering story since Apollo 11 and Apollo 13 is coming in December. I for one will be sitting on the edge of my chair for 29 days. @mfb seems to have his finger on space news. Perhaps he'll start a thread in December that keeps us posted on developments.
By the way, 29 days is not the complete story. It will be years before James Webb is fully operational.