Arthur T Knackerbracket has processed the following story:
It is 40 years since Voyager 2 performed the first and, so far, only flyby of the planet Uranus. The resulting trove of data, however, was a bonus that almost didn't happen.
At the time of Voyager 2's launch, Uranus wasn't part of the formal plan. The mission was referred to for a long time as the Mariner Jupiter-Saturn project. The JPL engineers famously had other ideas and ensured the spacecraft had enough fuel to continue on a trajectory to Uranus and beyond if the mission was approved.
As it was, Voyager 1 performing a successful flyby of Saturn's moon Titan meant that Voyager 2 could continue on the Grand Tour, taking in Uranus and Neptune.
Former Voyager scientist Garry Hunt told The Register: "It was a fantastic encounter because it almost didn't happen. After Saturn, we had the scan platform problem. If that problem had not been resolved, there wouldn't have been a Uranus encounter."
Following the Saturn encounter, the Voyager scan platform, an assembly that allowed cameras to pan and tilt, seized on the horizontal axis. The failure would have resulted in a significant data loss and was traced to a lubrication problem. Engineers were able to rectify the issue remotely, and the probe dodged a bullet on its way to Uranus.
"It was a testing encounter," recalled Hunt. "In the interim period between the '82 encounter with Saturn and getting to Uranus, the engineers had to reorganize how the scan platform was operating. The computer system had to be altered again. All the sequencing had to be dealt with in a new manner, and we had to prepare a wobbling spacecraft to take low-exposure images in a very dark environment and get that information back to Earth."
The focus had, after all, been on Jupiter and Saturn. While the probe's makers had filled the fuel tanks before launch, going to Uranus and Neptune was not a given. "We made sure, from an engineering perspective, it could do it. But they said, 'Oh dear, you haven't got any money.'"
The funding came, and Hunt recalled that serious work on what needed to be done started in early 1983. As well as software changes on the spacecraft (updates were made to use novel compression methods and avoid sending back black images when nothing was in view), antennas on Earth were upgraded to pick up the increasingly faint Voyager 2 signal.
"It was an incredible achievement," said Hunt, "an achievement for engineering, which science has obviously been able to explore more."
The flyby produced a tremendous amount of data about Uranus (or "George" if its 18th-century discoverer, William Herschel, had his way) – the planet had a magnetic field that was not aligned with its rotational axis. Additional rings appeared in Voyager 2's data, and images of the moon Miranda showed signs consistent with a violent impact that may have blown it apart and allowed it to reform.
[...] Finally, Hunt revealed that amid the flyby preparations, time was set aside to ensure everyone pronounced "Uranus" the approved way. "We had been briefed very strongly by the public relations people at JPL on how to pronounce 'Uranus' because the Australians were pronouncing it... incorrectly (which I will not mention)... and Americans found this somewhat embarrassing."
(Score: 5, Insightful) by VLM on Sunday February 01, @04:02PM (1 child)
The concept study from 2021 was pretty interesting to read
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranus_Orbiter_and_Probe [wikipedia.org]
The EU had its own proposal that went nowhere (get the pun?)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranus_Pathfinder [wikipedia.org]
The USA mission is delayed due to lack of plutonium production. Only countries with active and growing nuclear arsenals can make enough RTG fuel to launch deep space probes and the cold war is too cold in the USA now so the mission can't launch for at least another decade due to lack of fuel. Essentially Pu RTG fuel is a waste product of making really good weapons grade Pu, so if you're expanding your bomb supply you get the Voyager missions, if the bomb supply is not increasing, you do not get the Uranus Orbiter and Probe mission. Maybe Iran will launch the next space probe to Uranus.
I don't remember why the EU mission was cancelled. Their RTGs use AM-241 as thats easier to isolated from power reactor waste than the USA plutonium strategy. Obviously shutting down their nuke plants cuts off the AM-241 supply and the EU has other funding priorities such as replacing their legacy populations with cultures not historically interested in space exploration, etc. I don't think the EU, or whats left of it, will be going to outer space any time soon LOL.
Another interesting comparison is the booster (space-x) for the USA mission works and is on schedule and the booster for the EU mission was cancelled a couple years ago, so the EU plan has no booster... they could probably adapt the mission to a space-x rocket, sure. Possibly the legacy euros could use the Ariane 64, the first test launch is later this year, maybe it'll work. Apparently, Ariane 64 will be tested this year several times by tossing 32 Amazon satellites per mission, which is a lot. Starlink does not make a profit, so naturally Amazon is launching a "me too". Its a bubble thing. Maybe infinite competing unprofitable satellite networks will be the next bubble after AI.
(Score: 4, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 01, @07:10PM
"infinite competing unprofitable satellite networks"
While fucking up earth-based astronomy and creating more danger of a chain-reaction space garbage event
A lose-lose for the planets inhabitants.