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This is an archive article published on November 11, 2011

Russia struggles to save Mars probe

The probe will come crashing down in a couple of weeks if engineers fail to fix the problem.

As Russia’s space agency struggled Thursday to fix a probe bound for a moon of Mars that instead got stuck in Earth’s orbit,some experts said the chances of saving the $170 million craft looked slim. Roscosmos spokesman Alexei Kuznetsov said efforts to communicate with the unmanned Phobos-Grunt spacecraft hadn’t brought any results yet. The probe will come crashing down in a couple of weeks if engineers fail to fix the problem.

The Phobos-Grunt was launched Wednesday and reached preliminary orbit,but its engines never fired to send it off to the Red Planet. Kuznetsov said controllers on Thursday will continue attempts to fix the probe’s engines to steer it to its path to one of Mars’ two moons,Phobos.

Roscosmos chief Vladimir Popovkin,said the system that keeps the spacecraft pointed in the right direction may have failed. Other experts suggested that the craft’s computer failure was a likely cause.

If a software flaw was the problem,scientists can fix it by sending new commands. Some experts think,however,that the failure was rooted in hardware and will be extremely difficult,if not impossible,to fix.

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