"When you turn off those spacecraft's radio receivers, there's no way to turn them back on." [arstechnica.com]
Federal funding is about to run out for 19 active space missions studying Earth's climate, exploring the Solar System, and probing mysteries of the Universe.
This year's budget expires at the end of this month, and Congress must act before October 1 to avert a government shutdown. If Congress passes a budget before then, it will most likely be in the form of a continuing resolution, an extension of this year's funding levels into the first few weeks or months of fiscal year 2026.
The White House's budget request for fiscal year 2026 calls for a 25 percent cut to NASA's overall budget, and a nearly 50 percent reduction in funding for the agency's Science Mission Directorate. These cuts would cut off money for at least 41 missions, including 19 already in space and many more far along in development.
[...] Some of the mission names are recognizable to anyone with a passing interest in NASA's work. They include the agency's two Orbiting Carbon Observatory [arstechnica.com] missions monitoring data signatures related to climate change, the Chandra X-ray Observatory [arstechnica.com], which survived a budget scare last year, and two of NASA's three active satellites orbiting Mars.
And there's New Horizons, a spacecraft that made front-page headlines in 2015 when it beamed home the first up-close pictures of Pluto. Another mission on the chopping block is Juno, the world's only spacecraft currently at Jupiter.
Both spacecraft have more to offer, according to the scientists leading the missions.
"New Horizons is perfectly healthy," said Alan Stern, the mission's principal investigator at Southwest Research Institute (SWRI). "Everything on the spacecraft is working. All the spacecraft subsystems are performing perfectly, as close to perfectly as one could ever hope. And all the instruments are, too. The spacecraft has the fuel and power to run into the late 2040s or maybe 2050."
[...] NASA headquarters earlier this year asked Stern and Bolton, along with teams leading other science missions coming under the ax, for an outline of what it would take and what it would cost to "close out" their projects. "We sent something that was that was a sketch of what it might look like," Bolton said.
A "closeout" would be irreversible for at least some of the 19 missions at risk of termination.
"Termination doesn't just mean shutting down the contract and sending everybody away, but it's also turning the spacecraft off," Stern said. "And when you turn off those spacecraft's radio receivers, there's no way to turn them back on because they're off. They can never get a command in.
"So, if we change our mind, we've had another election, or had some congressional action, anything like that, it's really terminating the spacecraft, and there's no going back."