After a number of tests and new insights, SOHO engineers now say there will be no ‘blackout’ periods for SOHO science data.

High-rate transmissions from the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) were initially interrupted on 27 June 2003. The interruption was expected due to a recent malfunction in the pointing mechanism of the spacecraftโ€™s high-gain antenna (HGA). The loss of signal occurred on a 26-metre station of NASAโ€™s Deep Space Network (DSN).
Until 30 June 2003, however, the spacecraft continued beaming down its science data, which were successfully picked up by larger 34-metre DSN stations (when available). In addition, dumping on-board recorder data during these contacts has further reduced data losses so far.

On 30 June 2003, the 70-metre DSN station in Madrid, Spain, successfully transmitted high-rate science data through SOHO’s omnidirectional on-board low-gain antenna. SOHO normally uses this antenna only for low-rate telemetry in emergencies, and the antenna does not need to be repointed.

Successful switch

Even better, when high-rate telemetry was lost on 1 July 2003, during a 34-metre station pass, engineers successfully switched SOHO into a medium-rate telemetry mode, using the low-gain antenna. In medium rate, all real-time science telemetry can be downlinked during station passes. However, on-board recorder dumps are not possible in this mode.

The relatively late occurrence of the initial loss of contact means that the effective SOHOโ€™s HGA antenna beam width is larger than anticipated. Also, since the 34-metre stations are much quieter than the smaller stations, you can use them for longer time periods than expected. Being able to transmit science data through the on-board low-gain antenna using 70- and 34-metre stations therefore means that there will be no hard blackout periods for SOHO science data, given sufficient ground station resources.

Minor losses

However, 34- and 70-metre stations are in higher demand than the 26-metre stations that SOHO normally relies on. Minor data losses are therefore inevitable every day during the 2-3 week periods. โ€œWeโ€™re now talking only moderate fractions per day every day during the 2-3 week periods,โ€ says Bernhard Fleck, ESAโ€™s SOHO Project Scientist.

SOHO scientists expect full high-rate telemetry coverage, even on 26-metre stations, to resume on or about 14 July 2003. To achieve this, they will make the spacecraft roll 180ยบ around its Sun-pointing axis in a manoeuvre currently planned for 8 July 2003.

For more information, please contact:
Dr. Bernhard Fleck,
ESA SOHO Project Scientist
Tel: +1 301 286 4098
Fax: +1 301 286 0264
E-mail: bfleck@esa.nascom.nasa.gov