This image of NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit from August 2005 shows the solar panels still gleaming in the Martian sunlight and carrying only a thin veneer of dust a year and a half after the rover landed and began exploring the red planet in January 2004. NASA / JPL-Caltech / Cornell University
From L.A. Times:
The craft is dangerously low on power because of dust covering its solar arrays. News of the problem comes a day after NASA declared an end to the Phoenix polar mission.
Massive Martian dust storms are threatening the survival of NASA's Spirit rover, which has been exploring Mars for almost five years but is dangerously low on power.
Spirit last communicated with Earth on Sunday, when it reported that its solar arrays had produced just 89 watt-hours of energy, which is much less than the rover uses in a day.
It's also the least amount of power that either Spirit, or its twin, Opportunity, has produced over the entire life of the mission on Mars, which began in January 2004.
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