What will become of the two cubesats deployed as part of the Insight mission?












11














So as part of the Insight mission, two Cubesats were also launched to relay data during landing (so data can be obtained if something goes wrong)



Cubesats



What becomes of these satellites once their primary mission is done?










share|improve this question



























    11














    So as part of the Insight mission, two Cubesats were also launched to relay data during landing (so data can be obtained if something goes wrong)



    Cubesats



    What becomes of these satellites once their primary mission is done?










    share|improve this question

























      11












      11








      11







      So as part of the Insight mission, two Cubesats were also launched to relay data during landing (so data can be obtained if something goes wrong)



      Cubesats



      What becomes of these satellites once their primary mission is done?










      share|improve this question













      So as part of the Insight mission, two Cubesats were also launched to relay data during landing (so data can be obtained if something goes wrong)



      Cubesats



      What becomes of these satellites once their primary mission is done?







      mars artificial-satellite insight






      share|improve this question













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      asked Nov 26 at 20:01









      Machavity

      2,3131737




      2,3131737






















          3 Answers
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          15














          MarCO's primary mission isn't actually to transmit data from InSight during its entry period. That's a non-essentially function that can be done by other spacecraft, if needed. Instead, the main part of the MarCO mission is determining the functionality of cubesats during deep space missions. We've never before sent such small spacecraft this far from Earth, and the satellites are really mostly a testbed for future cubesat missions.



          In terms of their orbital trajectory - well, Emily Lakdawalla wrote about this back in March:




          With no ability to enter orbit at Mars, the MarCO spacecraft will shoot on past, remaining in solar orbit. I assume their Earth controllers will remain in contact for as long as possible.




          As I understand it, "as long as possible" is hopefully in the area of a few weeks.






          share|improve this answer





























            11














            Not an answer, but comments can't have pictures.



            After the primary mission of supporting the InSight landing, one of the MarCO sats did snap a nice picture of Mars while departing:



            enter image description here






            share|improve this answer





























              8














              Both MarCO cubesats are flying by Mars -- not in orbit. Furthermore, during their radio coverage of InSight's entry/descent/landing, their solar arrays are pointed away from the sun, towards Mars. They are on battery power, and will eventually stop transmitting when the batteries die. Then they will continue passively around the sun.



              MarCO paths






              share|improve this answer

















              • 1




                Why don't the MarCO sats re-orient the arrays towards the sun after EDL? Do they lack the attitude gas to do that?
                – Wayne Conrad
                Nov 26 at 21:25








              • 1




                @WayneConrad "Each MarCO's attitude-control system combines a star tracker, Sun sensors, gyroscopes and three-axis reaction wheels for monitoring and adjusting orientation. Accelerating a reaction wheel rotates the spacecraft in the opposite direction from the direction the wheel is spinning." No mention of any attitude gas at all. But I don't know why they couldn't reorient with just reaction wheels.
                – Ross Presser
                Nov 26 at 22:16






              • 3




                There are thrusters, fed by a single tank. They were used for course corrections, and to de-saturate the reaction wheels. MarCO A (nicknamed WALL-E) had a leak and is believed to be out of gas. MarCO B might be able to re-orient to the sun, but being aligned to send data to Earth is a higher priority.
                – Dr Sheldon
                Nov 26 at 23:03






              • 5




                Clearly, orienting for data transmission is important right now. That doesn't explain why they wouldn't reorient later. Many interplanetary craft aim solar and antenna by reorienting the craft repeatedly, after all.
                – Saiboogu
                Nov 26 at 23:09






              • 1




                According to space.com/42541-mars-insight-lander-success.html, "It's possible that MarCO-A and MarCO-B could observe an asteroid or other celestial body if their paths bring them close enough, and if funding for an extended mission is granted, John Baker, NASA's program office manager for the MarCO mission, told Space.com." This contradicts the assertion that they are going to run out of power in a few weeks and die.
                – Wayne Conrad
                Nov 27 at 0:58











              Your Answer





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              3 Answers
              3






              active

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              3 Answers
              3






              active

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              active

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              active

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              15














              MarCO's primary mission isn't actually to transmit data from InSight during its entry period. That's a non-essentially function that can be done by other spacecraft, if needed. Instead, the main part of the MarCO mission is determining the functionality of cubesats during deep space missions. We've never before sent such small spacecraft this far from Earth, and the satellites are really mostly a testbed for future cubesat missions.



              In terms of their orbital trajectory - well, Emily Lakdawalla wrote about this back in March:




              With no ability to enter orbit at Mars, the MarCO spacecraft will shoot on past, remaining in solar orbit. I assume their Earth controllers will remain in contact for as long as possible.




              As I understand it, "as long as possible" is hopefully in the area of a few weeks.






              share|improve this answer


























                15














                MarCO's primary mission isn't actually to transmit data from InSight during its entry period. That's a non-essentially function that can be done by other spacecraft, if needed. Instead, the main part of the MarCO mission is determining the functionality of cubesats during deep space missions. We've never before sent such small spacecraft this far from Earth, and the satellites are really mostly a testbed for future cubesat missions.



                In terms of their orbital trajectory - well, Emily Lakdawalla wrote about this back in March:




                With no ability to enter orbit at Mars, the MarCO spacecraft will shoot on past, remaining in solar orbit. I assume their Earth controllers will remain in contact for as long as possible.




                As I understand it, "as long as possible" is hopefully in the area of a few weeks.






                share|improve this answer
























                  15












                  15








                  15






                  MarCO's primary mission isn't actually to transmit data from InSight during its entry period. That's a non-essentially function that can be done by other spacecraft, if needed. Instead, the main part of the MarCO mission is determining the functionality of cubesats during deep space missions. We've never before sent such small spacecraft this far from Earth, and the satellites are really mostly a testbed for future cubesat missions.



                  In terms of their orbital trajectory - well, Emily Lakdawalla wrote about this back in March:




                  With no ability to enter orbit at Mars, the MarCO spacecraft will shoot on past, remaining in solar orbit. I assume their Earth controllers will remain in contact for as long as possible.




                  As I understand it, "as long as possible" is hopefully in the area of a few weeks.






                  share|improve this answer












                  MarCO's primary mission isn't actually to transmit data from InSight during its entry period. That's a non-essentially function that can be done by other spacecraft, if needed. Instead, the main part of the MarCO mission is determining the functionality of cubesats during deep space missions. We've never before sent such small spacecraft this far from Earth, and the satellites are really mostly a testbed for future cubesat missions.



                  In terms of their orbital trajectory - well, Emily Lakdawalla wrote about this back in March:




                  With no ability to enter orbit at Mars, the MarCO spacecraft will shoot on past, remaining in solar orbit. I assume their Earth controllers will remain in contact for as long as possible.




                  As I understand it, "as long as possible" is hopefully in the area of a few weeks.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Nov 26 at 20:13









                  HDE 226868

                  2,48911137




                  2,48911137























                      11














                      Not an answer, but comments can't have pictures.



                      After the primary mission of supporting the InSight landing, one of the MarCO sats did snap a nice picture of Mars while departing:



                      enter image description here






                      share|improve this answer


























                        11














                        Not an answer, but comments can't have pictures.



                        After the primary mission of supporting the InSight landing, one of the MarCO sats did snap a nice picture of Mars while departing:



                        enter image description here






                        share|improve this answer
























                          11












                          11








                          11






                          Not an answer, but comments can't have pictures.



                          After the primary mission of supporting the InSight landing, one of the MarCO sats did snap a nice picture of Mars while departing:



                          enter image description here






                          share|improve this answer












                          Not an answer, but comments can't have pictures.



                          After the primary mission of supporting the InSight landing, one of the MarCO sats did snap a nice picture of Mars while departing:



                          enter image description here







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Nov 26 at 22:43









                          Russell Borogove

                          82k2273355




                          82k2273355























                              8














                              Both MarCO cubesats are flying by Mars -- not in orbit. Furthermore, during their radio coverage of InSight's entry/descent/landing, their solar arrays are pointed away from the sun, towards Mars. They are on battery power, and will eventually stop transmitting when the batteries die. Then they will continue passively around the sun.



                              MarCO paths






                              share|improve this answer

















                              • 1




                                Why don't the MarCO sats re-orient the arrays towards the sun after EDL? Do they lack the attitude gas to do that?
                                – Wayne Conrad
                                Nov 26 at 21:25








                              • 1




                                @WayneConrad "Each MarCO's attitude-control system combines a star tracker, Sun sensors, gyroscopes and three-axis reaction wheels for monitoring and adjusting orientation. Accelerating a reaction wheel rotates the spacecraft in the opposite direction from the direction the wheel is spinning." No mention of any attitude gas at all. But I don't know why they couldn't reorient with just reaction wheels.
                                – Ross Presser
                                Nov 26 at 22:16






                              • 3




                                There are thrusters, fed by a single tank. They were used for course corrections, and to de-saturate the reaction wheels. MarCO A (nicknamed WALL-E) had a leak and is believed to be out of gas. MarCO B might be able to re-orient to the sun, but being aligned to send data to Earth is a higher priority.
                                – Dr Sheldon
                                Nov 26 at 23:03






                              • 5




                                Clearly, orienting for data transmission is important right now. That doesn't explain why they wouldn't reorient later. Many interplanetary craft aim solar and antenna by reorienting the craft repeatedly, after all.
                                – Saiboogu
                                Nov 26 at 23:09






                              • 1




                                According to space.com/42541-mars-insight-lander-success.html, "It's possible that MarCO-A and MarCO-B could observe an asteroid or other celestial body if their paths bring them close enough, and if funding for an extended mission is granted, John Baker, NASA's program office manager for the MarCO mission, told Space.com." This contradicts the assertion that they are going to run out of power in a few weeks and die.
                                – Wayne Conrad
                                Nov 27 at 0:58
















                              8














                              Both MarCO cubesats are flying by Mars -- not in orbit. Furthermore, during their radio coverage of InSight's entry/descent/landing, their solar arrays are pointed away from the sun, towards Mars. They are on battery power, and will eventually stop transmitting when the batteries die. Then they will continue passively around the sun.



                              MarCO paths






                              share|improve this answer

















                              • 1




                                Why don't the MarCO sats re-orient the arrays towards the sun after EDL? Do they lack the attitude gas to do that?
                                – Wayne Conrad
                                Nov 26 at 21:25








                              • 1




                                @WayneConrad "Each MarCO's attitude-control system combines a star tracker, Sun sensors, gyroscopes and three-axis reaction wheels for monitoring and adjusting orientation. Accelerating a reaction wheel rotates the spacecraft in the opposite direction from the direction the wheel is spinning." No mention of any attitude gas at all. But I don't know why they couldn't reorient with just reaction wheels.
                                – Ross Presser
                                Nov 26 at 22:16






                              • 3




                                There are thrusters, fed by a single tank. They were used for course corrections, and to de-saturate the reaction wheels. MarCO A (nicknamed WALL-E) had a leak and is believed to be out of gas. MarCO B might be able to re-orient to the sun, but being aligned to send data to Earth is a higher priority.
                                – Dr Sheldon
                                Nov 26 at 23:03






                              • 5




                                Clearly, orienting for data transmission is important right now. That doesn't explain why they wouldn't reorient later. Many interplanetary craft aim solar and antenna by reorienting the craft repeatedly, after all.
                                – Saiboogu
                                Nov 26 at 23:09






                              • 1




                                According to space.com/42541-mars-insight-lander-success.html, "It's possible that MarCO-A and MarCO-B could observe an asteroid or other celestial body if their paths bring them close enough, and if funding for an extended mission is granted, John Baker, NASA's program office manager for the MarCO mission, told Space.com." This contradicts the assertion that they are going to run out of power in a few weeks and die.
                                – Wayne Conrad
                                Nov 27 at 0:58














                              8












                              8








                              8






                              Both MarCO cubesats are flying by Mars -- not in orbit. Furthermore, during their radio coverage of InSight's entry/descent/landing, their solar arrays are pointed away from the sun, towards Mars. They are on battery power, and will eventually stop transmitting when the batteries die. Then they will continue passively around the sun.



                              MarCO paths






                              share|improve this answer












                              Both MarCO cubesats are flying by Mars -- not in orbit. Furthermore, during their radio coverage of InSight's entry/descent/landing, their solar arrays are pointed away from the sun, towards Mars. They are on battery power, and will eventually stop transmitting when the batteries die. Then they will continue passively around the sun.



                              MarCO paths







                              share|improve this answer












                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer










                              answered Nov 26 at 20:30









                              Dr Sheldon

                              4,62611647




                              4,62611647








                              • 1




                                Why don't the MarCO sats re-orient the arrays towards the sun after EDL? Do they lack the attitude gas to do that?
                                – Wayne Conrad
                                Nov 26 at 21:25








                              • 1




                                @WayneConrad "Each MarCO's attitude-control system combines a star tracker, Sun sensors, gyroscopes and three-axis reaction wheels for monitoring and adjusting orientation. Accelerating a reaction wheel rotates the spacecraft in the opposite direction from the direction the wheel is spinning." No mention of any attitude gas at all. But I don't know why they couldn't reorient with just reaction wheels.
                                – Ross Presser
                                Nov 26 at 22:16






                              • 3




                                There are thrusters, fed by a single tank. They were used for course corrections, and to de-saturate the reaction wheels. MarCO A (nicknamed WALL-E) had a leak and is believed to be out of gas. MarCO B might be able to re-orient to the sun, but being aligned to send data to Earth is a higher priority.
                                – Dr Sheldon
                                Nov 26 at 23:03






                              • 5




                                Clearly, orienting for data transmission is important right now. That doesn't explain why they wouldn't reorient later. Many interplanetary craft aim solar and antenna by reorienting the craft repeatedly, after all.
                                – Saiboogu
                                Nov 26 at 23:09






                              • 1




                                According to space.com/42541-mars-insight-lander-success.html, "It's possible that MarCO-A and MarCO-B could observe an asteroid or other celestial body if their paths bring them close enough, and if funding for an extended mission is granted, John Baker, NASA's program office manager for the MarCO mission, told Space.com." This contradicts the assertion that they are going to run out of power in a few weeks and die.
                                – Wayne Conrad
                                Nov 27 at 0:58














                              • 1




                                Why don't the MarCO sats re-orient the arrays towards the sun after EDL? Do they lack the attitude gas to do that?
                                – Wayne Conrad
                                Nov 26 at 21:25








                              • 1




                                @WayneConrad "Each MarCO's attitude-control system combines a star tracker, Sun sensors, gyroscopes and three-axis reaction wheels for monitoring and adjusting orientation. Accelerating a reaction wheel rotates the spacecraft in the opposite direction from the direction the wheel is spinning." No mention of any attitude gas at all. But I don't know why they couldn't reorient with just reaction wheels.
                                – Ross Presser
                                Nov 26 at 22:16






                              • 3




                                There are thrusters, fed by a single tank. They were used for course corrections, and to de-saturate the reaction wheels. MarCO A (nicknamed WALL-E) had a leak and is believed to be out of gas. MarCO B might be able to re-orient to the sun, but being aligned to send data to Earth is a higher priority.
                                – Dr Sheldon
                                Nov 26 at 23:03






                              • 5




                                Clearly, orienting for data transmission is important right now. That doesn't explain why they wouldn't reorient later. Many interplanetary craft aim solar and antenna by reorienting the craft repeatedly, after all.
                                – Saiboogu
                                Nov 26 at 23:09






                              • 1




                                According to space.com/42541-mars-insight-lander-success.html, "It's possible that MarCO-A and MarCO-B could observe an asteroid or other celestial body if their paths bring them close enough, and if funding for an extended mission is granted, John Baker, NASA's program office manager for the MarCO mission, told Space.com." This contradicts the assertion that they are going to run out of power in a few weeks and die.
                                – Wayne Conrad
                                Nov 27 at 0:58








                              1




                              1




                              Why don't the MarCO sats re-orient the arrays towards the sun after EDL? Do they lack the attitude gas to do that?
                              – Wayne Conrad
                              Nov 26 at 21:25






                              Why don't the MarCO sats re-orient the arrays towards the sun after EDL? Do they lack the attitude gas to do that?
                              – Wayne Conrad
                              Nov 26 at 21:25






                              1




                              1




                              @WayneConrad "Each MarCO's attitude-control system combines a star tracker, Sun sensors, gyroscopes and three-axis reaction wheels for monitoring and adjusting orientation. Accelerating a reaction wheel rotates the spacecraft in the opposite direction from the direction the wheel is spinning." No mention of any attitude gas at all. But I don't know why they couldn't reorient with just reaction wheels.
                              – Ross Presser
                              Nov 26 at 22:16




                              @WayneConrad "Each MarCO's attitude-control system combines a star tracker, Sun sensors, gyroscopes and three-axis reaction wheels for monitoring and adjusting orientation. Accelerating a reaction wheel rotates the spacecraft in the opposite direction from the direction the wheel is spinning." No mention of any attitude gas at all. But I don't know why they couldn't reorient with just reaction wheels.
                              – Ross Presser
                              Nov 26 at 22:16




                              3




                              3




                              There are thrusters, fed by a single tank. They were used for course corrections, and to de-saturate the reaction wheels. MarCO A (nicknamed WALL-E) had a leak and is believed to be out of gas. MarCO B might be able to re-orient to the sun, but being aligned to send data to Earth is a higher priority.
                              – Dr Sheldon
                              Nov 26 at 23:03




                              There are thrusters, fed by a single tank. They were used for course corrections, and to de-saturate the reaction wheels. MarCO A (nicknamed WALL-E) had a leak and is believed to be out of gas. MarCO B might be able to re-orient to the sun, but being aligned to send data to Earth is a higher priority.
                              – Dr Sheldon
                              Nov 26 at 23:03




                              5




                              5




                              Clearly, orienting for data transmission is important right now. That doesn't explain why they wouldn't reorient later. Many interplanetary craft aim solar and antenna by reorienting the craft repeatedly, after all.
                              – Saiboogu
                              Nov 26 at 23:09




                              Clearly, orienting for data transmission is important right now. That doesn't explain why they wouldn't reorient later. Many interplanetary craft aim solar and antenna by reorienting the craft repeatedly, after all.
                              – Saiboogu
                              Nov 26 at 23:09




                              1




                              1




                              According to space.com/42541-mars-insight-lander-success.html, "It's possible that MarCO-A and MarCO-B could observe an asteroid or other celestial body if their paths bring them close enough, and if funding for an extended mission is granted, John Baker, NASA's program office manager for the MarCO mission, told Space.com." This contradicts the assertion that they are going to run out of power in a few weeks and die.
                              – Wayne Conrad
                              Nov 27 at 0:58




                              According to space.com/42541-mars-insight-lander-success.html, "It's possible that MarCO-A and MarCO-B could observe an asteroid or other celestial body if their paths bring them close enough, and if funding for an extended mission is granted, John Baker, NASA's program office manager for the MarCO mission, told Space.com." This contradicts the assertion that they are going to run out of power in a few weeks and die.
                              – Wayne Conrad
                              Nov 27 at 0:58


















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