DATA CONDITIONING SYSTEM
Mariner’s scientific experiments were controlled and their outputs processed by a data conditioning system which gathered the information from the instruments and prepared it for transmission to the Earth by telemetry. In this function, the data system acted as a buffer between the science systems and the spacecraft data encoder.
The pulse output of certain of the science instruments was counted and the voltage amplitude representations of other instruments were converted from analog form to a binary digital equivalent of the information signals. The data conditioning system also included circuits to permit time-sharing of the telemetry channels with the spacecraft engineering data, generation of periodic calibration signals for the radiometer and magnetometer, and control of the direction and speed of the radiometer scanning cycle.
During Mariner’s cruise mode, the data conditioning system was used for processing both engineering and science data. If the spacecraft lost lock on the Sun or the Earth during the cruise mode, no scientific data would be telemetered during the reorientation period. Engineering data were sampled and transmitted for about 17 seconds during every 37-second interval. The planetary encounter mode involved only science and no engineering data transmission. In this mode, the science data were sampled during 20-second intervals.