Glitch hits NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter

NASA says its Mars Odyssey spacecraft circling the Red Planet put itself into safe model after detecting a problem in a system that keeps it oriented in space.

An artist's rendering shows the Mars Odyssey spacecraft. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

PASADENA, Calif., June 11 (UPI) -- NASA says its Mars Odyssey spacecraft circling the Red Planet put itself into safe mode after detecting a problem in a system that keeps it oriented in space.

The orbiter put itself into the protective standby mode early Friday when it detected unusual readings from one of its three reaction wheels, which are used to control its orientation, SPACE.com reported.

"The spacecraft is safe, and information we've received from it indicates the problem is limited to a single reaction wheel," mission manager Chris Potts of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., said in a statement. "The path forward is evaluating the health of the reaction wheel and our options for proceeding."

The orbiter is equipped with a spare reaction wheel onboard should one of the three primary wheels fail, NASA said.

Mars Odyssey has been studying the Red Planet since it arrived in orbit in 2011.

It has also served as a communications relay station for NASA's Spirit and Opportunity landers on the martian surface and will do the same for the next Mars rover, Curiosity, when it lands in August.

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Glitch hits NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter

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