NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity has fully recovered from a glitch that knocked out its main computer system in late February, space agency officials say.

The Curiosity rover has now resumed science work inside the red planet’s huge Gale Crater. The car-size robot is monitoring martian radiation and weather again, and it delivered more samples of powdered rock from a previous drilling operation to its onboard instruments March 23, rover team members said.

“We are back to full science operations,” Curiosity deputy project manager Jim Erickson, of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif., said in a statement March 25.

Curiosity had been operating pretty much flawlessly until late February, when a memory glitch corrupted its main, or A-side, computer. Engineers swapped the rover over to its backup (B-side) computer, spurring Curiosity to go into a precautionary “safe mode” Feb. 28.

As the team worked to fix the A-side, engineers also spent time checking out the B-side and configuring it for surface operations. The A-side had been running Curiosity since a few weeks before the rover touched down on Mars the night of Aug. 5.

The rover’s 10 science instruments all can be operated by either the A-side or the B-side computer, but other gear is not so flexible. For example, each of Curiosity’s 12 engineering cameras is linked only to the main or the backup computer, researchers said.

“This was the first use of the B-side engineering cameras since April 2012, on the way to Mars,” JPL’s Justin Maki, team lead for these cameras, said in a statement. “Now we’ve used them on Mars for the first time, and they’ve all checked out OK.”

Bringing the rover back up to speed has been delayed a few times by other events as well. In early March, engineers briefly put Curiosity on standby again to wait out a Mars-bound solar eruption. And on March 16, a separate software issue sent Curiosity into safe mode for a few days.

But all appears to be going well now. The B-side is running fine, NASA officials say, and the A-side is available as a backup if needed.

Curiosity is getting back to work just in time for a lengthy communications blackout.

For much of next month, Mars will be almost directly behind the sun from Earth’s perspective. This alignment, which can disrupt interplanetary signals, is known as Mars solar conjunction. It occurs every 26 months.

Mission engineers do not want to take the chance of a corrupted command confusing the rover, so no directions will be sent to Curiosity from April 4 through May 1. Curiosity will continue to operate during this time, using a set of commands relayed in advance.

NASA’s other red-planet robots, such as the Opportunity rover and the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, also will be on their own for much of April.

Curiosity is the centerpiece of NASA’s $2.5 billion Mars Science Laboratory mission, which seeks to determine if the planet could ever have hosted microbial life.

The rover has already accomplished its main goal. Earlier this month, Curiosity scientists announced that Mars was indeed habitable billions of years ago; basing their conclusion on the rover’s analysis of rock samples it drilled from deep within an outcrop.

The powdered rock samples Curiosity recently delivered to its instruments are additional specimens collected from that initial drilling operation. The rover will not drill another rock until after the Mars solar conjunction, team members have said.