NASA’s AIM mission ends due to battery-related issues

NASA launched the AIM mission in 2007 to study night-glowing clouds, sometimes known as fossilized clouds. The AIM spacecraft is invaluable to scientists from its observatory, located about 600 meters above the planet's surface.
 NASA’s AIM mission ends due to battery-related issues
READING NOW NASA’s AIM mission ends due to battery-related issues
NASA launched the AIM mission in 2007 to study night-glowing clouds, sometimes known as fossilized clouds. The AIM spacecraft has gathered invaluable data for scientists from its observatory point, located about 600 meters above the planet’s surface. Recently, however, NASA announced in a press release that it was ending its AIM mission.

AIM spacecraft now glides into obscurity

Data collected thanks to the AIM spacecraft, which was originally built in 2007 for a two-year mission, was aided by 379 scientific studies, including a recent 2018 study that found that methane emissions from human-caused climate change cause deaths at night.

However, although the battery problems that first started in 2019 were somehow resolved by NASA, the battery problem has recently occurred again. That’s why NASA ended the AIM mission. For AIM no longer responding to NASA, the AIM team will continue to monitor AIM’s communications for two weeks, just in case the spacecraft can restart and transmit a signal.

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