As a member of the public, I appreciate seeing the raw data, even if the interpretation is wrong.
The group with flaky data goes public, and the group that is solidly technically competent stays silent.
But there is, there must be, meaningful news to share.
Quote from: djellison on 12/20/2025 12:50 amQuote from: LouScheffer on 12/19/2025 01:29 pmAs a member of the public, I appreciate seeing the raw data, even if the interpretation is wrong.What if there was some mythical third option........AMSAT DL stream their downlink, but don't offer rushed, inaccurate interpretations.QuoteThe group with flaky data goes public, and the group that is solidly technically competent stays silent.This isn't staying silent. https://science.nasa.gov/blogs/maven/2025/12/15/nasa-continues-maven-spacecraft-recontact-efforts/If there was meaningful news to be shared - they would share it.But there is, there must be, meaningful news to share. It's one of: (a) Oops, we both made the same mistake. There is no evidence of MAVEN surviving, or (b) Here is what we saw and why we think it's really MAVEN.Both of these are meaningful, and one of them must be true. And of course what does "brief" mean, what is the evidence for rotation, what is the changed orbit and how different is it from the one that MAVEN was last seen in. All meaningful.Of course it would be even more embarrassing for JPL to have made the same mistake that AMSAT did. But that's the price of doing hard science. I wish I could say I never published anything that in retrospect is clearly wrong and I should have known it and not rushed to print. But I have, and all you can say is "Yup, that was a mistake. Here's how I should have caught it" and move on. Just ignoring it does not help, and in fact makes it worse, since it looks like you are dumb enough not the see, or too proud to admit, your own obvious error.
Quote from: LouScheffer on 12/19/2025 01:29 pmAs a member of the public, I appreciate seeing the raw data, even if the interpretation is wrong.What if there was some mythical third option........AMSAT DL stream their downlink, but don't offer rushed, inaccurate interpretations.QuoteThe group with flaky data goes public, and the group that is solidly technically competent stays silent.This isn't staying silent. https://science.nasa.gov/blogs/maven/2025/12/15/nasa-continues-maven-spacecraft-recontact-efforts/If there was meaningful news to be shared - they would share it.
It is evident that you [...] directed political and targeted comments to degrade both a well-known organization and a project, and dragged JPL for a degrading remark. [...]If I were you, I would delete that post, or let me do it; otherwise, I will send it to Policy, better yet, the "dead thread".Tony
Quote from: catdlr on 12/20/2025 04:18 amIt is evident that you [...] directed political and targeted comments to degrade both a well-known organization and a project, and dragged JPL for a degrading remark. [...]If I were you, I would delete that post, or let me do it; otherwise, I will send it to Policy, better yet, the "dead thread".TonyI respect both JPL and AMSAT; both are doing the best they can on a difficult problem. I don't believe it degrades anyone to suggest they may have made a mistake. But I believe it hurts science when folks could clarify speculation and misinformation fail to do so.However, it is your forum and not mine. I have deleted my post.
But I believe it hurts science when folks could clarify speculation and misinformation fail to do so.
Quote from: LouScheffer on 12/19/2025 01:29 pmI respectfully disagree. As a member of the public, I appreciate seeing the raw data, even if the interpretation is wrong.That's not how any science or technical organization works.
I respectfully disagree. As a member of the public, I appreciate seeing the raw data, even if the interpretation is wrong.
Mike Malin, the PI for many of the Mars cameras, arranged for the raw images to go straight to the public web site. I recall him saying "If I'm asleep, you see the images before I do", though I can't find the exact quote. I've seen no problems resulting from this, and it's been ongoing for years.
Full disclosure also helps tamp down conspiracy theories when anyone is allowed to see the raw data, even among those who have no interest in analyzing it themselves.
Anyway, here's hoping we soon have some raw data about MAVEN...
Quote from: LouScheffer on 12/20/2025 06:19 pmAnyway, here's hoping we soon have some raw data about MAVEN...The "raw data" you are asking for would be similar to that described in this 138-page document https://pds-geosciences.wustl.edu/messenger/mess-v_h-rss-1-edr-rawdata-v1/messrs_0xxx/document/dsn_trk_2_34_tnf_sis.pdf and would require a lot of effort to do anything with.One imagines that you really want a plot of some kind and some interpretation more numerical than what the NASA update says, but I think the team has better things to do with their time than mess with public releases.
Finding a sinusoidal signal in a noisy time series, and estimating its frequency and phase, is an easy (undergrad level) exercise for anyone with a EE or physics background. There are literally millions of people (IEEE alone has 500,000 members) with the required expertise. There are entire communities of radio amateurs doing exactly this for weak signal communication, see WSJT Home Page. The software for this is open source. If the data were available, I'm sure someone would try it.
Remove the 'updates' part of the title if everyone is just going to chat.
Quote from: djellison on 12/18/2025 03:04 pmAmSat DL has confirmed that what they saw was MRO, not MVN.This is a fine example of why organizations should triple-check their stuff before making a sensationalist post on social media. How the h@ll did they think they were able to "hear" MAVEN while NASA couldn't? AMSAT DL just made themselves look like a bunch of clowns.Literal amateurs.
AmSat DL has confirmed that what they saw was MRO, not MVN.
But do we know that for sure ??
NASA is continuing efforts to recontact its MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN) spacecraft, which was last heard from on Dec. 6. In partnership with NASA’s Deep Space Network (DSN), the MAVEN team has sent commands for spacecraft recovery and is monitoring the network for a spacecraft signal.The MAVEN team also continues to analyze tracking data fragments recovered from a Dec. 6 radio science campaign. This information is being used to create a timeline of possible events and identify likely root cause of the issue. As part of that effort, on Dec. 16 and 20, NASA’s Curiosity team used the rover’s Mastcam instrument in an attempt to image MAVEN’s reference orbit, but MAVEN was not detected. Additional analysis will continue, but planned monitoring will be affected by the upcoming solar conjunction.Mars solar conjunction – a period when Mars and Earth are on opposite sides of the Sun – begins Monday, Dec. 29, and NASA will not have contact with any Mars missions until Friday, Jan. 16. Once the solar conjunction window is over, NASA plans to resume its efforts to reestablish communications with MAVEN.
I'm not a rocket scientist but trying to image the spacecraft directly does not give me confidence that they have received much tracking data 🙁