Our farthest-away spacecraft isn't finished yet.
NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft, at over 15 billionmiles away and hurtling ever-deeper into the cosmos, beamed back crucial data about its health for the first time in five months. NASA released a photo of mission engineers celebrating the success of their software patch with raised arms and wide grins.
"After some inventive sleuthing, the mission team can — for the first time in five months — check the health and status of the most distant human-made object in existence," the space agency said in an online post.
SEE ALSO: NASA spacecraft keeps on going faster and faster and fasterThe pioneering and beloved Voyager 1, however, isn't completely out of the woods. "The next step is to enable the spacecraft to begin returning science data again," NASA explained. Before the mishap, which began in November 2023, Voyager 1 was returning unprecedented data about the radiation in interstellar space and how far the sun's protective bubble of energy and particles extends into the cosmos. (Its sister craft, Voyager 2, at over 12 billion miles, continues to send back this information.)
"The science data that the Voyagers are returning gets more valuable the farther away from the Sun they go, so we are definitely interested in keeping as many science instruments operating as long as possible," Linda Spilker, Voyager’s project scientist, said last year.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Though NASA has repeatedly fixed software glitches on the aging Voyager craft, each over a half-century-old now, the situation was prolonged enough to grow worrisome. Early this month, the space agency noted "corrupted memory" had indeed caused the interstellar probe to send back indecipherable information. One of the onboard computers, the flight data subsystem (FDS), had a single chipthat no longer worked.
What's more, engineers couldn't just pop the hood. "Space is hard. Interstellar space is harder," NASA posted on X (formerly Twitter), in February. "Solving issues like this takes time – because it takes more than 22 hours for a message to travel from Earth to my twin Voyager 1 and another 22 hours for a response to make it back."
"Space is hard. Interstellar space is harder."
As the corrupted chip couldn't be replaced, NASA engineers sent a deep space signal to Voyager to store the chip's unique code in other chips, as "no single location is large enough to hold the section of code in its entirety." It worked.
What's next? Voyager engineers will similarly now move and test code responsible for the mission's science data.
Beyond inevitable software mishaps on old hardware (hardware that's also exposed to the hostile particles zipping through interstellar space, known galactic cosmic rays), the probes' greatest limiting factor is nuclear fuel. Supplies are running low; in the next few years, some scientific instruments will likely need to be powered down. It's possible that NASA can keep the Voyager craft communicating through the mid-2030s.
Yet even when communication ceases, the mission will carry on. Voyager craft carry "a kind of time capsule, intended to communicate a story of our world to extraterrestrials," the space agency explained. "The Voyager message is carried by a phonograph record, a 12-inch gold-plated copper disk containing sounds and images selected to portray the diversity of life and culture on Earth."
If anyone beyond Earth ever gets to listen, they'll be lucky: The records contain tunes from Chuck Berry.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Voyager spacecraft gave us a scare. But NASA's bringing it back to life.-蜻蜓点水网
sitemap
文章
23821
浏览
85
获赞
92494
Paul Ryan tried to roast Donald Trump, and Twitter wasn't having it
When people think "funny," I'm fairly confident Paul Ryan does not come to mind.Still, the Speaker oTrump says society needs to 'cherish' and 'protect' Elon Musk
Society must come together to "protect" and "cherish" Tesla CEO Elon Musk like the walking Faberg&eaWatch Rudy Giuliani get booed at a Yankees game
Remember when New Yorkers loved Rudy Giuliani? Oh, how times have changed. The former NYC mayor andPrince tribute mural sprouts a new 'do thanks to blooming flowers
On Sunday, artist Christine Stein stepped outside her California home to discover a surprise: The maFacebook and Italy team up to teach students how to spot fake news
If you're like me, you've seen Facebook friends post links to questionable blogs, people have textedAnother sinkhole is attempting to swallow Donald Trump, but everything's *fine
*Donald Trump is president, and a sinkhole has formed on the White House lawn.Listen, I'm not sayingNetflix's energy consumption nearly doubled in 2019
Netflix just released its latest Environmental Social Governance (ESG) report and it reveals the comFacial recognition company scraped billions of photos to help the cops
A Facebook photo from the end of college could come back to haunt you. A New York Times deep-dive inNews anchor claps back at body shamers who said she was 'too big' for her on
A Dallas reporter has addressed her haters and supporters in a powerful video after a body shamer saJoe Biden calls Zuckerberg 'a real problem' and wants to revoke Section 230
Joe Biden is angry at Facebook — and wants to fundamentally change the internet because of it.Leaked Tesla employee handbook is as ridiculous as Elon Musk's Twitter
An alleged copy of Tesla's self-titled "Anti-Handbook Handbook" for new employees leaked and, like EFlorida isn't actually being invaded by zombies, despite emergency alert
Though Florida makes headlines for all sorts of fun and bizarre reasons, finding the Sunshine StateWhy the Facebook Poke has no place in 2017Facebook poke
I find that the absolute best way to introduce yourself to someone is to sneak up behind them, tap tSale of .org domain registry delayed by California attorney general
The .org domain takeover has been delayed, at least for now.California Attorney General Xavier BecerA BBC presenter fell in a swimming pool on live TV and took it like a champ
Mind the step.SEE ALSO: BBC Dad makes a beautiful, earnest commitment to us all