The NASA spacecraft that smashed into the Utah desert last month while bringing home fragile samples of the sun may have been doomed by engineering drawings that had been done backwards, an investigating board said Friday.Mistakes will be made. That's why you have reviews. And I'd say that Lockheed-Martin needs to review their system PDQ.
Because of the backward drawings, the switches that were supposed to detect Genesis' re-entry into Earth's atmosphere and trigger its parachutes were placed incorrectly, said Michael G. Ryschkewitsch, chairman of the Mishap Investigation Board.
He emphasized, however, that the panel has not completed its findings on what went wrong with the $264 million mission to capture particles of the solar wind.
The design drawings were produced by Lockheed Martin Astronautics, which built Genesis for NASA, Ryschkewitsch said. How the mistake escaped detection is under investigation, he said.
The discovery of the likely cause of Genesis' crash raised questions about review processes at Lockheed Martin Astronautics, which was involved in a pair of failed Mars missions that were major embarrassments for NASA.
NASA's Mars Polar Lander, built by the company, was lost in December 1999, probably when a sensor cut off its descent motor too soon. A few months earlier, the Mars Climate Orbiter was lost when no one noticed that Lockheed Martin Astronautics was giving NASA navigation data in English units rather than metric.
"Since Genesis was being assembled around the time of the Mars failures there were a number of additional reviews and we are trying to understand in detail what was looked at and exactly what happened there, and we're not yet prepared to comment on that," Ryschkewitsch said.
Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company, based outside Denver, did not immediately return phone messages and pages left after business hours Friday.
Sunday, 17 October 2004
Lockheed-Martin and Rocket Science
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