Genesis Mission Status Report
9/23/04
The Genesis team has shipped its first scientific sample from the mission's
specially constructed cleanroom at the U.S. Army Proving Ground in Dugway, Utah. The
sample, containing what are known as "lid foils," was attached to the interior lid of
the Genesis sample return capsule.
"This is the first batch in what we are growing more confident will be many more
scientifically valuable samples," said Genesis Project Manager Don Sweetnam of NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "It appears that we have recovered about 75 to 80
percent of these lid foils. A great deal of credit has to go to the dedicated men and women
of Genesis who continue to do very precise, detailed work out there in the Utah desert."
After the sample was shipped from Utah, it was received by Genesis co-investigator Nishiizumi
Kunihiko from the University of California, Berkeley, Space Sciences Laboratory.
In addition to the lid foils, there was optimistic news about the collector array. Team members
from JPL arrived in Utah on Monday with a special fixture to aid in handling the science canister's
stack of four collector arrays. The stack was successfully removed as one piece. With the stack on
the fixture, the team has begun the process of disassembling the arrays. Several large pieces of
individual collector materials, including one completely intact hexagon, were recovered from the
top array.
The Genesis cleanroom activities are focused on getting the materials ready for shipping. A date
has not yet been selected for transporting the Genesis science canister and recovered collector
materials from Dugway to NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. The team continues its meticulous
work and believes that a significant repository of solar wind materials has survived that will keep
the science community busy working on their science objectives.
News and information about Genesis is available online at http://www.nasa.gov/genesis. For background
information about Genesis, visit http://genesismission.jpl.nasa.gov. For information about NASA visit
http://www.nasa.gov.
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