While I was scooting around on the Web the other night trying to find something else, I also ran across a brief reference somewhere to the fact that MER-A would unquestionably have crashed due to the low upper air density, had it not been for the fact that (for some as-yet unknown reason) its parachute's braking ability also proved higher than expected! I'll see if I can track down that note again. Clearly we cannot go on just trusting to good luck where Mars landers are concerned...
I've found it -- and it was a lot more than a brief reference. It was, in fact, the "MER Flight Operations Technical Consultation" (
http://nesc.larc.nasa.gov/admin/docu...tion_Paper.pdf ), and the relevant material on the problems during MER-A's landing are spread over pg. 8-9, 25-34, and 40-43. Quoting the summary of the two main problems on pg. 8:
"1. The reconstruction of the atmospheric density profile was based on accelerometer measurements and the assumption that the aerodynamic characteristics of the aeroshell were nominal. The reconstructed density was lower prior to parachute deployment and higher after parachute deployment than had been predicted on the basis of the atmospheric model used.