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posted by janrinok on Friday July 22 2022, @09:49AM   Printer-friendly
from the heart-of-these-star-crossed-voyagers dept.

Imagine that you built something that even the most optimistic person thought would last 4-5 years, and yet almost 45 years later it is still carrying out the task of discovering the secrets of our solar system and beyond. And they, for there are two of them, are not quite finished yet. This is a remarkable story. [JR]

Record-Breaking Voyager Spacecraft Begin to Power Down:

If the stars hadn't aligned, two of the most remarkable spacecraft ever launched never would have gotten off the ground. In this case, the stars were actually planets—the four largest in the solar system. Some 60 years ago they were slowly wheeling into an array that had last occurred during the presidency of Thomas Jefferson in the early years of the 19th century. For a while the rare planetary set piece unfolded largely unnoticed. The first person to call attention to it was an aeronautics doctoral student at the California Institute of Technology named Gary Flandro.

It was 1965, and the era of space exploration was barely underway—the Soviet Union had launched Sputnik 1, the first artificial satellite, only eight years earlier. Flandro, who was working part-time at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., had been tasked with finding the most efficient way to send a space probe to Jupiter or perhaps even out to Saturn, Uranus or Neptune. Using a favorite precision tool of 20th-century engineers—a pencil—he charted the orbital paths of those giant planets and discovered something intriguing: in the late 1970s and early 1980s, all four would be strung like pearls on a celestial necklace in a long arc with Earth.

This coincidence meant that a space vehicle could get a speed boost from the gravitational pull of each giant planet it passed, as if being tugged along by an invisible cord that snapped at the last second, flinging the probe on its way. Flandro calculated that the repeated gravity assists, as they are called, would cut the flight time between Earth and Neptune from 30 years to 12. There was just one catch: the alignment happened only once every 176 years. To reach the planets while the lineup lasted, a spacecraft would have to be launched by the mid-1970s.

As it turned out, NASA would build two space vehicles to take advantage of that once-in-more-than-a-lifetime opportunity. Voyager 1 and Voyager 2, identical in every detail, were launched within 15 days of each other in the summer of 1977. After nearly 45 years in space, they are still functioning, sending data back to Earth every day from beyond the solar system's most distant known planets. They have traveled farther and lasted longer than any other spacecraft in history. And they have crossed into interstellar space, according to our best understanding of the boundary between the sun's sphere of influence and the rest of the galaxy. They are the first human-made objects to do so, a distinction they will hold for at least another few decades. Not a bad record, all in all, considering that the Voyager missions were originally planned to last just four years.

Early in their travels, four decades ago, the Voyagers gave astonished researchers the first close-up views of the moons of Jupiter and Saturn, revealing the existence of active volcanoes and fissured ice fields on worlds astronomers had thought would be as inert and crater-pocked as our own moon. In 1986 Voyager 2 became the first spacecraft to fly past Uranus; three years later it passed Neptune. So far it is the only spacecraft to have made such journeys. Now, as pioneering interstellar probes more than 12 billion miles from Earth, they're simultaneously delighting and confounding theorists with a series of unexpected discoveries about that uncharted region.

Their remarkable odyssey is finally winding down. Over the past three years NASA has shut down heaters and other nonessential components, eking out the spacecrafts' remaining energy stores to extend their unprecedented journeys to about 2030. For the Voyagers' scientists, many of whom have worked on the mission since its inception, it is a bittersweet time. They are now confronting the end of a project that far exceeded all their expectations.*

"We're at 44 and a half years," says Ralph McNutt, a physicist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), who has devoted much of his career to the Voyagers. "So we've done 10 times the warranty on the darn things."

Engineering Voyager 2's Encounter with Uranus. Richard P. Laeser, William I. McLaughlin and Donna M. Wolff; November 1986.


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  • (Score: 5, Interesting) by gznork26 on Friday July 22 2022, @09:27PM

    by gznork26 (1159) on Friday July 22 2022, @09:27PM (#1262389) Homepage Journal

    Despite my having washed out of a Space Technology program earlier in my career, and courtesy of a lead from a friend on a software contract in Los Angeles, my wife and I both managed to get software contracts working on NASA/JPL's Deep Space Network during the run-up to Voyager 2's encounter with Saturn. Because of the round-trip light time delay in communications with the spacecraft, when it was time for the pictures to start slowly streaming in, there was nothing to do but watch the monitors while the mission scientists announced what each incoming image ought to be, assuming that all the calculations had been correct.

    That accomplishment was the culmination of the effort of many teams, of people in all kinds of specialties, all doing something that had never been accomplished before. That life was the antithesis of the Internet's break-it-fast-with-public-betas approach. And I have to wonder how many people today can even imagine going out on a limb like that and staking the work of so many others on your bit of it being done right. Even so, the engineers of the time made sure that even the worst-case scenarios had a Plan-B, a slow and laborious way to re-program the machine code driving the craft. It was on the basis of that level of planning that the Voyagers have been able to survive this long.

    If and when people ever follow in Voyager's footsteps, it will be a far different kind of adventure.

    --
    Khipu were Turing complete.
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