Mars Odyssey (original) (raw)

Meet the Mars Odyssey Orbiter

Key Facts

Launch April 7, 2001, 11:02 am EST
Launch Location Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida
Cruise April-October 2001
Mars Orbit Insertion Oct. 24, 2001
Rocket Delta II 7925
Mission Duration 2001 – ongoing

News Feature

Odyssey Captures Huge Volcano, Nears 100,000 Orbits

The 23-year-old orbiter is taking images that offer horizon-wide views of the Red Planet similar to what astronauts aboard the International Space Station see over Earth.

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News Feature

Odyssey Captures Huge Volcano, Nears 100,000 Orbits

Tech Specs

Dimensions 7.2 feet (2.2 meters) long5.6 feet (1.7 meters) tall8.5 feet (2.6 meters) wide
Total Weight 1,598.4 pounds (725.0 kilograms)
Command and Data Handling Subsystem The heart of this subsystem is a RAD6000 computer, a radiation-hardened version of the PowerPC chip used on most models of Macintosh computers. With 128 megabytes of random access memory (RAM) and three megabytes of non-volatile memory, which allows the system to maintain data even without power, the subsystem runs Odyssey’s flight software and controls the spacecraft through interface electronics.The entire command and data handling subsystem weighs 24.5 pounds (11.1 kilograms).
Power Electrical power subsystem weighs 189.6 pounds (86.0 kilograms).
Propulsion Uses hydrazine propellant with nitrogen tetroxide as an oxidizer, produces a minimum thrust of 144 pounds of force (65.3 kilograms) of force.Each of the four thrusters used for attitude control produces a thrust of 0.2 pound of force (0.1 kilogram) of force. Four 5.0-pound-force (2.3-kilogram-force) thrusters are used for turning the spacecraft.The entire propulsion subsystem weighs 109.6 pounds (49.7 kilograms).
Communications Odyssey’s telecommunications subsystem is composed of both a radio system operating in the X-band microwave frequency range and a system that operates in the ultra high frequency (UHF) range.The X-band system is used for communications between Earth and the orbiter, while the UHF system is used for communications between Odyssey and any landers present on the Martian surface at any given time.The telecommunication subsystem weighs 52.7 pounds (23.9 kilograms).

The Interplanetary Internet

The Mars Odyssey orbiter’s telecommunications systems provide a crucial service for Martian spacecraft, serving as the first link in a communications bridge back to Earth – an “interplanetary Internet” that can be used by numerous international spacecraft in coming years.

Learn More About the Mars Relay Network about The Interplanetary Internet

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