Published 6 months ago • loading... • Updated 6 months ago
NASA's Mars Antenna Offline After Mechanical Failure
The 70-meter Mars Antenna at Goldstone over-rotated, damaging critical systems and halting communications with deep space missions, with no clear repair timeline announced.
On Nov. 10, JPL confirmed DSS-14 has been offline since Sept. 16, with no return date, as 'the antenna remains offline as the board members, engineers, and technicians evaluate the structure and make recommendations and repairs'.
Engineers say an over-rotation on Sept. 16 strained cabling and piping at DSS-14, the 70-meter Mars Antenna, damaging fire suppression hoses and causing quickly mitigated flooding.
As the only antenna able to reach Voyager 2, DSS-14 also 'pings' near-Earth asteroids and has detected over 200 since Arecibo's collapse.
The outage has disrupted spacecraft communications, stalling near-Earth asteroid studies for nearly two months and forcing the James Webb Space Telescope to adjust operations.
The NASA Office of Inspector General warned the Deep Space Network is oversubscribed, and with an unclear repair timeline, the outage complicates Artemis II preparations, recalling Artemis I’s need for more than 900 hours of support.