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NASA receives response from Voyager 1 spacecraft 13 billion miles away after 37 years of inactivity
Tech Startups ^ | March 22, 2018 | Staff

Posted on 03/29/2018 5:54:55 PM PDT by Enchante

The thrusters aboard the Voyager 1 spacecraft just did what we thought was impossible. After 37 years of inactivity, NASA just received response from spacecraft 13 billion miles away, NASA said in a statement on its website. Voyager 1 is NASA’s farthest and fastest spacecraft. It was launched on September 5, 1977. Having operated for 40 years, 6 months and 14 days as of March 19, 2018, the spacecraft relies on small devices called thrusters to orient itself so it can communicate with Earth. These thrusters fire in tiny pulses, or “puffs,” lasting mere milliseconds, to subtly rotate the spacecraft so that its antenna points at our planet. Now, the Voyager team is able to use a set of four backup thrusters, dormant since 1980.

In a statement on its website, NASA said: “The Voyager team assembled a group of propulsion experts at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, to study the problem. Chris Jones, Robert Shotwell, Carl Guernsey and Todd Barber analyzed options and predicted how the spacecraft would respond in different scenarios. They agreed on an unusual solution: Try giving the job of orientation to a set of thrusters that had been asleep for 37 years.”

“With these thrusters that are still functional after 37 years without use, we will be able to extend the life of the Voyager 1 spacecraft by two to three years,” said Suzanne Dodd, project manager for Voyager at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California.

“The Voyager flight team dug up decades-old data and examined the software that was coded in an outdated assembler language, to make sure we could safely test the thrusters,” said Jones, chief engineer at JPL.

In a further testament to the robustness of Voyager 1, the Voyager team completed a successful test of the spacecraft’s “trajectory correction maneuver” (TCM) thrusters on November 28, 2017. The last time these backup thrusters were fired up was in November 1980. Voyager project manager Suzanne Dodd anticipates that successful utilization of the TCM thrusters will extend the Voyager mission by an additional “two to three years”.

Voyager 1’s extended mission is expected to continue until around 2025 when its radioisotope thermoelectric generators will no longer supply enough electric power to operate its scientific instruments.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: aliens; nasa; space; voyager
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To: Enchante

Voyager does not have a home to return to.

Or does it?


21 posted on 03/29/2018 6:09:28 PM PDT by 353FMG
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To: Fhios

Apparently it’s that those particular thrusters had not been used in 37 yrs. The article confused me, too. I thought they meant that Voyager 1 had been incommunicado all that time.


22 posted on 03/29/2018 6:10:42 PM PDT by Enchante (FusionGPS "dirty dossier" scandal links Hillary, FBI, CIA, Dept of Justice... "Deep State" is real)
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To: Enchante

Does assembler ever become outdated?


23 posted on 03/29/2018 6:12:07 PM PDT by posterchild
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To: Enchante

Take that all you countries that have switched to the metric system!


24 posted on 03/29/2018 6:15:02 PM PDT by Conan the Librarian (The Best in Life is to crush my enemies, see them driven before me, and the Dewey Decimal System)
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To: henkster
Which is even more amazing. I just started my freshman year in college when it was launched, and now I’m contemplating retirement in a few years.

It is amazing, I was 27 when Voyager was launched in 1977, now at 67 I am retired and it is still going!.

25 posted on 03/29/2018 6:15:17 PM PDT by Inyo-Mono
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To: a fool in paradise

Thanks, that info is much appreciated for us non-spacejunkies. :^)

The article gave a number of us the misimpression that Voyager 1 had gone silent after 1980.

Now I find that NASA’s own PR is much better and clearer than the article I poster:

https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/voyager-1-fires-up-thrusters-after-37


26 posted on 03/29/2018 6:15:37 PM PDT by Enchante (FusionGPS "dirty dossier" scandal links Hillary, FBI, CIA, Dept of Justice... "Deep State" is real)
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To: Enchante

Yeah, I was suckered in by the hyperbole and mythmaking of the headline and other bits in the article.

That’s why I did some surface digging.


27 posted on 03/29/2018 6:17:27 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Wear an orange pin to mourn the victims of the Tide Pods Challenge)
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To: Enchante

“Send more Chuck Berry”


28 posted on 03/29/2018 6:24:51 PM PDT by fungoking (Tis a pleasure to live in the 0zarks)
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To: Enchante

The Voyager series of spacecraft were the first to use a convolutional code and the new Viterbi algorithm for decoding which allowed error correction of exceedingly weak signals like we are now receiving. Dr. Viterbi went on in later years to found a little outfit called Qualcomm.


29 posted on 03/29/2018 6:26:13 PM PDT by SpaceBar
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To: Enchante

Aliens commandeered it. Count on it!


30 posted on 03/29/2018 6:28:26 PM PDT by TigersEye (This is the age of the death of reason.)
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To: Enchante

great news. a tribute to the skill and diligence of those original project engineers.


31 posted on 03/29/2018 6:28:43 PM PDT by dadfly
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To: posterchild

Does assembler ever become outdated?

_________________

Only to HTML programmers


32 posted on 03/29/2018 6:32:41 PM PDT by Chickensoup (Leftists today are speaking as if they plan to commence to commit genocide against conservatives.)
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To: Arm_Bears

They never call. They never write...sad.


33 posted on 03/29/2018 6:32:59 PM PDT by richardtavor
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To: Enchante

“dormant since 1980”
Yeah, I know what that’s like...


34 posted on 03/29/2018 6:33:32 PM PDT by mrsmith (Dumb sluts: Lifeblood of the Media, Backbone of the Democrat/RINO Party!)
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To: a fool in paradise

. Earth-side software and computers for reading the images are also no longer available.[4]

__________________

They pitched equipment that was used on a continuing project?


35 posted on 03/29/2018 6:34:21 PM PDT by Chickensoup (Leftists today are speaking as if they plan to commence to commit genocide against conservatives.)
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To: posterchild

Yep. In fact, it gets outdated first. Assembler is the basic way to talk to a processor. It is unique to a processor or a family of processors.


36 posted on 03/29/2018 6:34:39 PM PDT by brownsfan (Behold, the power of government cheese.)
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To: Enchante

That means it takes about 20 hours for a signal to reach it.


37 posted on 03/29/2018 6:34:55 PM PDT by aquila48
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To: a fool in paradise

“I guess to “tech startups” maybe”

I was thinking along those lines ... “assembly” is never outdated ... we have tools to generate the equivalent of assembly these days (compilers) and, in some instances, people code in assembly for their particular processor for performance and/or deterministic behavior. Outdated makes absolutely no sense :-).

I’m pretty sure they meant “assembler language for a now obsolete processor”.


38 posted on 03/29/2018 6:37:12 PM PDT by edh
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To: Enchante

Very cool.

Carl Sagan would’ve appreciated this.

BBBillion.


39 posted on 03/29/2018 6:38:16 PM PDT by Jane Long (Praise God, from whom ALL blessings flow.)
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To: Enchante

40 posted on 03/29/2018 6:40:00 PM PDT by seawolf101 (Member LES DEPLORABLES)
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