NASA is planning an interstellar mission that could last more than 100 years:
When the famous Voyager twin spacecraft left Earth in the 1970s, their mission was originally meant to last only five years. Although they’re 14 billion and 11 billion miles, respectively, away from Earth, Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 are continuing to provide invaluable scientific data.
However, the Voyager twins can’t go on forever. Scientists estimate that the last instruments onboard the spacecraft will shut down by 2031 at the latest, if some malfunction doesn’t happen before then. This is why NASA wants a replacement — and this time, this new interstellar mission will be designed to run for a long time from the get-go. In fact, scientists at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) who have been tasked with designing the new mission, believe this Voyager successor could function for more than a century.
The new project, known as the Interstellar Probe, could launch sometime in the 2030s. It’s meant to travel faster and farther than any man made object has and probably ever will in the foreseeable future. While still in the solar system, the plan is for the spacecraft to visit one or more of the 130 known dwarf planets in the outer reaches of the solar system. There are some clues that some of these icy worlds may have formed as ocean worlds.
According to early design projections, the Interstellar Probe should travel at a speed at least twice as fast as Voyager 1, which should help it travel about 375 astronomical units (34 billion miles) in its first 50 years. If it manages to travel another 50 years, the spacecraft could end up covering more than 800 astronomical units, which amount to a staggering 74 billion miles.
As a point of comparison, the Parker Solar Probe
... is a NASA space probe launched in 2018 with the mission of making observations of the outer corona of the Sun. It will approach to within 9.86 solar radii (6.9 million km or 4.3 million miles) from the center of the Sun, and by 2025 will travel, at closest approach, as fast as 690,000 km/h (430,000 mph), or 0.064% the speed of light.
(Score: 2) by looorg on Wednesday October 27 2021, @12:52PM (2 children)
Shouldn't something that is supposed to hang out with that many dwarfs be called Snow White?
Still it's not bad for a couple of probes sent in 1977 with tech then that is even older to go until the 2030s, that said they were not built or assumed to last this long so I guess they could be wrong on this estimate to. One would think it would just be improving, shielding and strengthening that is in order to make a new one last a few decades more. But I'm sure they are going to over-engineer that so it breaks in record time. After all it seems to be the wave of the future.
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday October 27 2021, @01:40PM (1 child)
Reminds me of Neil DeGrasse Tyson saying how the aqueducts were an engineering failure (from memory so this may be imprecise):
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 28 2021, @06:02PM
FWIW, civilization != empire. The civilization of the romans continue(s/d), the empire fell.