Watch replay of Ulysses end-of-mission webcast here
The mission had been predicted to end in July 2008, when the satellite's weakened power supply was expected to fall below the minimum required to keep fuel lines from freezing, without which Ulysses would be uncontrollable. At that time, the ESA/NASA operations team planned to continue operating the spacecraft in a reduced capacity for a few more weeks.
However, through smart engineering and realtime innovation, controllers determined they could keep the lines from freezing by briefly firing the thrusters every few hours. In fact, Ulysses has continued gathering valuable scientific data throughout most of the past year - until today, after a decision was taken to end the mission due to continuing weak power and the unavailability of ground station time.
Launched by Space Shuttle Discovery on 6 October 1990, the 18-year, 8-month mission has returned a wealth of scientific data on the space environment above and below the poles of the Sun. The spacecraft and its suite of nine instruments had to be highly sensitive yet robust enough to withstand some of the most extreme conditions in the Solar System, including a close fly-by of the giant planet Jupiter.
Switch off instrument high voltages
Deschedule the 'Loss of Command' programme
Perform a last Earth-pointing manoeuvre
Switch on the redundant receiver
Switch off the tape recorder
Switch to the 64-bit-per-second communication rate
Configure the S-band radio communications
Switch off the transmitter
At the time of sending the last commands, Ulysses was located approximately 5.4 astronomical units from Earth and the one-way radio signal time was approximately 45 minutes.
Not only has Ulysses allowed scientists to map constituents of the heliosphere in space, its longevity enabled the Sun to be observed over a longer period of time than ever before.
"The Sun's activity varies with an 11-year cycle, and now we have measurements covering almost two complete cycles," said Marsden. "This long observation has led to one of the mission's key discoveries, namely that the solar wind has grown progressively weaker during the mission and is currently at its weakest since the start of the Space Age."
"But what's remarkable is that many of the people involved then are here today to send the last commands," he added. "A half-dozen of the team have worked on Ulysses for its entire life - this mission has been sufficiently challenging and inspiring for talented people to dedicate significant portions of their careers to it. Also, a number of those who have moved on to other jobs at JPL are joining us to celebrate the end of this unique mission."
Following today's shutdown, Ulysses flight data will be archived and available to future ESA and NASA mission teams for reference; the mission's scientific data are already being stored in the Ulysses science data archives at ESTEC, ESA's technical centre, and at NASA's National Space Science Data Center (NSSDC).
During its life, Ulysses was operated by a joint ESA/NASA team at NASA/JPL. ESA managed the mission operations and provided the spacecraft, built by Dornier Systems, Germany (now Astrium). NASA provided the Space Shuttle Discovery for launch and the inertial upper stage and payload-assist module to put Ulysses in its correct orbit. NASA also provided the radioisotope thermoelectric generator which powers the spacecraft and payload, and the NASA Deep Space Network (DSN) was responsible for communicating with the satellite. Teams from universities and research institutes in Europe and the United States provided the nine science instruments.
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