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Date: 21 Nov 2006 20:24:04
From: Sam Wormley
Subject: NASA'S Mars Global Surveyor May be at Mission's End


Guy Webster 818-354-6278

Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

Erica Hupp/Dwayne Brown 202-358-1237/1726

NASA Headquarters,
Washington

News Release:
2006-139
Nov. 21,
2006

NASA'S Mars Global Surveyor May be at Mission's End

Pasadena, Calif. - NASA's Mars Global Surveyor has likely finished its
operating career. The spacecraft has served the longest and been the
most productive of any mission ever sent to the red planet.

"Mars Global Surveyor has surpassed all expectations," said Michael
Meyer, NASA's lead scientist for Mars exploration at NASA Headquarters,
Washington. "It has already been the most productive science mission to
Mars, and it will yield more discoveries as the treasury of
observations it has made continues to be analyzed for years to come."
Its camera has returned more than 240,000 images to Earth.

The orbiter has not communicated with Earth since Nov. 2. Preliminary
indications are that a solar panel became difficult to pivot, raising
the possibility that the spacecraft may no longer be able to generate
enough power to communicate. Engineers are also exploring other
possible explanations for the radio silence.

"Realistically, we have run through the most likely possibilities for
re-establishing communication, and we are facing the likelihood that
the amazing flow of scientific observations from Mars Global Surveyor
is over," said Fuk Li, Mars Exploration Program manager at NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "We are not giving up hope,
though."

Efforts to regain contact with the spacecraft and determine what has
happened to it will continue. NASA's newest Mars spacecraft, the Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter, pointed its cameras toward Mars Global Surveyor
on Monday. "We have looked for Mars Global Surveyor with the star
tracker, the context camera and the high-resolution camera on Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter," said Doug McCuistion, Mars Exploration Program
director at NASA Headquarters. "Preliminary analysis of the images did
not show any definitive sightings of a spacecraft."

The next possibility for learning more about Mars Global Surveyor's
status is a plan to send it a command to use a transmitter that could
be heard by one of NASA's Mars Exploration Rovers later this week

Mars Global Surveyor launched on Nov. 7, 1996, and began orbiting Mars
on Sept. 11, 1997. It pioneered the use of aerobraking at Mars, using
careful dips into the atmosphere for friction to shrink a long
elliptical orbit into a nearly circular one. The mission then started
its primary mapping phase in April 1999. The original plan was to
examine the planet for one Mars year, nearly two Earth years. Based on
the value of the science returned by the spacecraft, NASA extended its
mission four times.

"It is an extraordinary machine that has done things the designers
never envisioned despite a broken wing, a failed gyro and a worn-out
reaction wheel. The builders and operating staff can be proud of their
legacy of scientific discoveries and key support for subsequent
missions," said Tom Thorpe, project manager for Mars Global Surveyor at
JPL.

The spacecraft evaluated landing sites for the twin NASA rovers that
landed in 2004 and sites for future landings of the Phoenix and Mars
Science Laboratory missions. It monitored atmospheric conditions during
aerobraking by newer orbiters. It served as a relay link for the rovers
and provided mapping information about their surroundings.

"When we watched the launch 10 years ago, we wondered if we would make
the specified mission length. We certainly were not thinking of a
10-year operating life," said JPL retiree Glenn Cunningham, who managed
the Global Surveyor project through development and launch.

A few of the mission's many important discoveries about Mars include:

o The spacecraft's camera found gullies cut into many slopes that
have few, if any, impact craters. This indicates the gullies are
geologically young. Scientists interpret this as evidence of action
by liquid water, essentially in modern times.

o The mineral-mapping infrared spectrometer found concentrations of a
mineral that often forms under wet conditions, fine-grained
hematite. This discovery led to selection of a hematite-rich region
as the landing site for NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity.

o Laser altimeter measurements have produced an unprecedented global
topographic map of Mars. The instrument revealed a multitude of
highly eroded or buried craters too subtle for previous
observation, and mapped canyons within the polar ice caps.

o The magnetometer found localized remnant magnetic fields,
indicating that Mars once had a global magnetic field like Earth's,
shielding the surface from deadly cosmic rays.

o The camera found a fan-shaped area of interweaving, curved ridges
interpreted as evidence of an ancient river delta resulting from
persistent flow of water over an extended period in the planet's
ancient past.

o A long life allowed Global Surveyor to track changes through
repeated annual cycles. For three Martian summers in a row,
deposits of carbon-dioxide ice near Mars' South Pole shrunk from
the previous year's size, suggesting a climate change in progress.

JPL manages Mars Global Surveyor for the NASA Science Mission
Directorate, Washington.