Some Statistics for Spirit & Oppy, As the journey continues on Mars |
Some Statistics for Spirit & Oppy, As the journey continues on Mars |
Oct 24 2014, 02:12 PM
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#331
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 2922 Joined: 14-February 06 From: Very close to the Pyrénées Mountains (France) Member No.: 682 |
More data.
The MER program is now over 6000 Sols and over 325.000 pictures (ok, 100k's of the sun...). Anyway, here is another update. 2 data are not 100% sure, the date when we get 25K as well as (recently) 325K. The rest is ok. I remind you that Spirit stopped transmitting on sol 2210 on March 23rd 2010. Pictures- When - Days for 25K picts - Pictures/day 25.000 30/05/2004 136 92 50.000 12/10/2004 272 92 70.000 01/03/2005 140 71 75.000 28/03/2005 167 75 85.000 11/05/2005 44 114 95.000 24/06/2005 44 114 100.000 19/07/2005 113 111 125.000 27/10/2005 100 125 150.000 01/04/2006 156 80 175.000 01/03/2007 334 37 200.000 30/10/2007 243 51 225.000 01/01/2009 429 29 250.000 14/09/2009 256 49 275.000 21/12/2010 463 27 300.000 15/09/2012 634 20 325.000 10/10/2014 755 17 -------------------- |
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Nov 6 2014, 03:30 AM
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#332
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Member Group: Members Posts: 754 Joined: 9-February 07 Member No.: 1700 |
A question came to mind: since Curiosity landed, which rover has logged more on its odometer - MSL or Opportunity?
A quick look at a couple of dilo stat posts (miss those!) from earlier this year suggests that both rovers have averaged roughly 4km per earth year. It's interesting that the distances are similar, considering the difference in size and age of each and the contrasting terrains being covered. Amazing that Opportunity has averaged almost 4km/year for a decade! ADMIN: Those answers are always available if you care to check. Opportunity Curiosity |
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Nov 6 2014, 06:38 AM
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#333
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 2173 Joined: 28-December 04 From: Florida, USA Member No.: 132 |
A question came to mind: since Curiosity landed, which rover has logged more on its odometer - MSL or Opportunity? A quick look at a couple of dilo stat posts (miss those!) from earlier this year suggests that both rovers have averaged roughly 4km per earth year. I don't expect Curiosity to ever surpass Opportunity's odometry (40 plus Km). I've inset NASA's MSL extended mission map over jmknapp's route map showing in the red box the extent of the extended mission map on jmknapp's map. I expect that Curiosity will be within that box over the next two years and not log over a total of 20 Km (from landing). After that, the going will only get slower with rougher terrain and a high density of science targets. Even if Curiosity lasts 20 years, I wonder if it will ever reach 40 Km. That's a good thing because I think the main reason will be the great amount of science that will be done without traveling very far. Opportunity's crater hopping was a much different situation. In the meantime, Opportunity keeps plugging away. P.S. Look what I found. |
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Jan 17 2015, 07:02 PM
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#334
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 2922 Joined: 14-February 06 From: Very close to the Pyrénées Mountains (France) Member No.: 682 |
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Jan 25 2015, 08:28 PM
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#335
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Member Group: Members Posts: 194 Joined: 3-January 10 Member No.: 5156 |
-------------------- Need more input ...
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Aug 14 2015, 06:11 PM
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#336
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Member Group: Members Posts: 194 Joined: 3-January 10 Member No.: 5156 |
-------------------- Need more input ...
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Jan 3 2016, 06:12 PM
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#337
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Member Group: Members Posts: 194 Joined: 3-January 10 Member No.: 5156 |
From my side there is nothing new in the second half of 2015: Oppy is still in Marathon Valley
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Jul 21 2016, 06:12 PM
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#338
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Member Group: Members Posts: 194 Joined: 3-January 10 Member No.: 5156 |
And a little update: Again a half year is over. Oppy is still in the Marathon valley, but prepares to rove to other parts of the Endeavour crater.
And Opportunity is now over thirteen years away from the earth. -------------------- Need more input ...
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Jan 8 2017, 09:21 PM
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#339
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Member Group: Members Posts: 194 Joined: 3-January 10 Member No.: 5156 |
And an update again: We have reached 2017 and Oppy is going to celebrate its landing date at 24th January.
Here is the updated timeline of this mission. -------------------- Need more input ...
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Jan 9 2017, 09:56 AM
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#340
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 3516 Joined: 4-November 05 From: North Wales Member No.: 542 |
It's great that you're keeping this diagram up to date. Solar conjunction for 2017 looks a bit early there, though, comparing the gaps between previous ones.
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Jun 21 2017, 08:41 PM
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#341
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Member Group: Members Posts: 194 Joined: 3-January 10 Member No.: 5156 |
Yes, you're right, ngunn. I corrected this.
Again here the timelime for our brave rover. Also I updated is to the first half of 2017. -------------------- Need more input ...
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Aug 14 2017, 01:34 PM
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#342
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Junior Member Group: Members Posts: 20 Joined: 19-March 13 Member No.: 6897 |
... Does anyone know where to find a spreadsheet containing all this power production data? I'm looking for hourly power production going all the way back to the beginning of the mission, although I'm not sure that data exists. Per-sol data would work, too, if no hourly data exists. |
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Aug 14 2017, 02:25 PM
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#343
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Member Group: Admin Posts: 976 Joined: 29-September 06 From: Pasadena, CA - USA Member No.: 1200 |
The Sol-by-Sol data exists but I'm not sure this is publicly available. Not sure about the hourly data from the BCB. I typically only look at the Sol data. What use would you make of this data? I can provide the POC to officially ask for this.
Paolo -------------------- Disclaimer: all opinions, ideas and information included here are my own,and should not be intended to represent opinion or policy of my employer.
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Nov 5 2017, 10:29 PM
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#344
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Member Group: Members Posts: 194 Joined: 3-January 10 Member No.: 5156 |
The Sol-by-Sol data exists but I'm not sure this is publicly available. Not sure about the hourly data from the BCB. I typically only look at the Sol data. What use would you make of this data? I can provide the POC to officially ask for this. Paolo After one day of hacking, I finally made a table which contains some of the interesting data. I put it on google Docs and let it editable for everyone. Here is the link: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1HgO...dit?usp=sharing The table contains the following: - The sols until 4895 - The watt-hours per sol as reported in the weekly MER report (https://mars.nasa.gov/mer/mission/status_opportunityAll.html) - Also the tau factor and dust factor - And the odometry - In the column "Cleaning event" I marked the sols, which were reported that a cleaning event happend. - The columns "Start site", "L sub S", "UTC at local noon" and activity I took from the Analyst's Notebook. (But only to Sol 4680). For the first 250 Sols I don't have very much information. Is there any other source for this time? -------------------- Need more input ...
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Nov 6 2017, 07:56 AM
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#345
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 1089 Joined: 19-February 05 From: Close to Meudon Observatory in France Member No.: 172 |
After one day of hacking, I finally made a table which contains some of the interesting data. I put it on google Docs and let it editable for everyone. Here is the link: Dear MoreInput. This is an very nice work I've done a kind of similar one but within a mission log with figures added only for special events and purposes (dust storm, etc). Your table goes far beyond ! Thanks a lot for sharing it to the community. With warmest regards, VM |
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