![]() Political world braces for possible federal indictment of Trump Roberts, Kavanaugh side with liberal justices in Alabama voting rights victory ![]() Newsom proposes constitutional amendment to restrict access to gunsĮl Niño officially arrives early: What it means for 2023 weather Supreme Court strikes down Alabama congressional map in victory for voting. House cancels votes for rest of week amid floor ‘chaos’ GOP warns of pushback ahead of looming Trump indictmentīiden vetoes measure overturning student loan forgiveness planĬalifornia, Texas make legal moves against Florida migrant flights The mission delays have also affected other projects at JPL, namely the center’s Venus Emissivity, Radio Science, InSAR, Topography and Spectroscopy (or VERITAS) mission. This new path also removes the mission’s side project: a small satellite mission called Janus that would have traveled with the Psyche spacecraft to visit two binary asteroid systems. Had it launched as originally scheduled, the spacecraft would have arrived at its destination in early 2026 however, now teams have to find an alternate route to the target, putting its arrival in 2029. Psyche is set to explore a metallic core of an asteroid that is 140 miles wide and located in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. “We believe the 2023 launch readiness date is credible, and the overall probability of mission success is high.” “We believe that Psyche is on a positive course for an October 2023 launch,” he added. Thomas Young, who led the IRB, said during a press conference on Monday. “The IRB believes the response to our Psyche project and JPL institution findings and recommendations to be excellent,” retired aerospace executive A. However, since then, the review board has noted that JPL and the Psyche team have taken the steps - which included adding more experienced members to the team, reorganizing the workforce, and monitoring the project with more comprehensive metrics - to turn the project around and ensure that it can make it to the launch pad, calling the effort “outstanding.” ![]() The board’s review revealed workforce issues at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) that led to the delay. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |