PIA13321: Lifting the Runners
 Target Name:  Earth
 Mission:  Goldstone Deep Space Network (DSN)
 Instrument:  Deep Space Network Antenna 
 Product Size:  4000 x 3000 pixels (w x h)
 Produced By:  JPL
 Full-Res TIFF:  PIA13321.tif (36 MB)
 Full-Res JPEG:  PIA13321.jpg (1.32 MB)

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Original Caption Released with Image:

Under the unflinching summer sun, workers at NASA's Deep Space Network complex in Goldstone, Calif., use a crane to lift a runner segment that is part of major surgery on a giant, 70-meter-wide antenna. The work gives the antenna a kind of joint replacement. The antenna is officially called Deep Space Station 14, but is also known as the "Mars antenna." The antenna got its nickname from its first task: to track the Mariner 4 spacecraft after the spacecraft's historic flyby of Mars in 1966.

During the spring and summer of 2010, workers replaced two kinds of joints in the 70-meter Goldstone antenna: the elevation bearings and the azimuth hydrostatic bearing. The elevation bearing enables the antenna to tip horizon to zenith and the hydrostatic bearing enables the antenna to turn sideways. This was the first time the hydrostatic bearing was replaced in this antenna.

The runner segment is part of the hydrostatic bearing assembly. The hydrostatic bearing assembly puts the weight of the antenna on three pads that glide around on a film of oil around a large steel ring. The ring, known as the runner, is 24 meters (80 feet) in diameter and needs to be flat to work efficiently. After 44 years of near-constant use, the runner surface has become uneven. Engineers and managers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., which manages the Deep Space Network for NASA, have chosen a new epoxy grout that is much more impervious to oil and thicker runner segments with more tightly fitting joints.

The crane brought each of the 11 new runner segments to the base of the antenna -- about 10 meters (40 feet) off the ground. Workers at the base of the antenna then took control of the runner segment and lowered it gently onto air bearings. The air bearings work like an air hockey table, puffing pressurized air under the segments to allow workers to move them, virtually friction-free, around the base of the antenna.

The image was taken on July 26, 2010, when workers were in the middle of putting in 11 segments that make up the runner for the hydrostatic bearing assembly.

JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the Deep Space Network for NASA Headquarters, Washington. More information about the Deep Space Network is online at http://deepspace.jpl.nasa.gov/dsn/index.html.

Image Credit:
NASA/JPL-Caltech

Image Addition Date:
2010-08-25