On all
Apollo missions to the moon, the landing radar was required to acquire the surface before a landing could be attempted. But on
Apollo 14, the landing radar was unable to lock on. Mission control told the astronauts to cycle the power. They did, the radar locked on just in time, and the landing was completed. During the
Rosetta mission to comet
67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, the
Philae lander did not return the expected telemetry on awakening after arrival at the comet. The problem was diagnosed as "somehow a glitch in the electronics", engineers cycled the power, and the lander awoke correctly. During the launch of the billion dollar
AEHF-6 satellite on 26 March 2020 by an Atlas V rocket from
Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in
Florida, a hold was called at T-46 seconds due to hydraulic system not responding as expected. The launch crew turned it off and back on, and the launch proceeded normally. In 2023 the
Interstellar Boundary Explorer spacecraft stopped responding to commands after an anomaly. When gentler techniques failed, NASA resorted to rebooting the spacecraft with the remote equivalent of a power cycle. == See also ==