Topic: Voyager 1 back on course
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mightymoe

Sat 12/02/17 01:03 PM

Nasa's Voyager 1 spacecraft - cruising interstellar space billions of miles from Earth - was back on the right track Friday thanks to thrusters that were fired up for the first time in 37 years.

The unmanned spaceship was launched along with its twin, Voyager 2, more than 40 years ago to explore the outer planets of our solar system, traveling further than any human-made object in history.

But after decades of operation, the "attitude control thrusters" that turn the spacecraft by firing tiny "puffs" had degraded. The small adjustments are needed to turn Voyager's antenna toward Earth, allowing it to continue sending communications.

"At 13 billion miles from Earth, there's no mechanic shop nearby to get a tune-up," Nasa said in a news release.

Experts at the agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California decided to turn to four backup thrusters that were last used on November 8, 1980.

"The Voyager flight team dug up decades-old data and examined the software that was coded in an outdated assembler language, to make sure we could safely test the thrusters," said Chris Jones, chief engineer at JPL.

The engineers fired up the thrusters on Tuesday and tested their ability to turn Voyager using 10-millisecond pulses. Then they waited 19 hours, 35 minutes for the test results to arrive at an antenna in Goldstone, California.

Turns out the thrusters worked just fine.

"The Voyager team got more excited each time with each milestone in the thruster test. The mood was one of relief, joy and incredulity after witnessing these well-rested thrusters pick up the baton as if no time had passed at all," said Todd Barber, a JPL propulsion engineer.

Being able to use the backup thrusters means the lifespan of Voyager 1 has been extended by two or three years, added Suzanne Dodd, project manager for Voyager.

Nasa plans to switch over to the formerly dormant thrusters in January. They will likely also conduct similar tests on the backup thrusters on Voyager 2.

Scientists still hear from the Voyager spacecraft daily, and expect to get data for about another decade.

Astronomy textbooks were rewritten on a wide scale thanks to the Voyager spacecraft, which zoomed past Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and Uranus.

The plutonium-powered spaceships will continue until they finally run out of fuel, and will then orbit in the center of the Milky Way galaxy.
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lu_rosemary

Sat 12/02/17 01:59 PM

unique.
you always post interesting stuff for us to read, Moe.thank you.
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Tom4Uhere

Sat 12/02/17 02:26 PM

The engineers fired up the thrusters on Tuesday and tested their ability to turn Voyager using 10-millisecond pulses. Then they waited 19 hours, 35 minutes for the test results to arrive at an antenna in Goldstone, California.

Gives new meaning to the term "Remote Control"
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eric22t

Sat 12/02/17 02:29 PM

i wish i could apply those remotes to my toolslaugh

nice to see the old obsolete stuff still kicking
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Tom4Uhere

Sat 12/02/17 02:32 PM

will then orbit in the center of the Milky Way galaxy

The center of The Milky Way Galaxy is a supermassive Black hole called Sagittarius A.
The craft will likely, eventually collide with that, not orbit it, if it makes it that far without colliding with something else.

Then again, it might get swept up as space junk by an alien civilization cleaning their inter-galactic highways.
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Poetrywriter

Sat 12/02/17 03:27 PM

Now that is an interesting read. Thanks Moe...
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Integrityis1st

Sat 12/02/17 06:33 PM

13 billion miles away, 40+ years later and possibly another decade of data is incredible. :satellite:
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modified2004

Sun 12/03/17 01:22 PM

Well NASA is nothing but a big smoke screen for the real space program, I would,t believe anything NASA says...
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mightymoe

Mon 12/04/17 05:27 AM


13 billion miles away, 40+ years later and possibly another decade of data is incredible. :satellite:
for a 70's machine, yes...
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Poetrywriter

Mon 12/04/17 06:00 PM


Well NASA is nothing but a big smoke screen for the real space program, I would,t believe anything NASA says...


Show us the proof....