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NASA hears from spacecraft 15 billion miles from Earth on radio not used since 1981

NASA has announced it reconnected with the Voyager 1 spacecraft after a brief and tense period of radio silence. The spacecraft recently turned off one of its two radio transmitters - and experts are now trying to discover what happened.

Voyagers 1 and 2 have been flying for more than 47 years and are the only two spacecraft to operate in interstellar space. Their advanced age has meant an increase in the frequency and complexity of technical issues and new challenges for the mission engineering team.

They believe the transmitter shut-off was caused by the spacecraft’s fault protection system, which autonomously responds to onboard issues. For example, if the spacecraft overdraws its power supply, fault protection will conserve power by turning off systems that aren’t essential for keeping it flying. But it may take days to weeks before the team can identify the underlying issue that triggered the fault protection system.

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When the flight team, which is based at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, beams instructions to the spacecraft via the agency’s Deep Space Network, Voyager 1 sends back engineering data that the team assesses to determine how the spacecraft responded to the command. This process normally takes a couple of days — almost 23 hours for the command to travel more than 15 billion miles (24 billion kilometres) from Earth to the spacecraft, and another 23 hours for the data to travel back.

On October 16, the flight team sent a command to turn on one of the spacecraft’s heaters. While Voyager 1 should have had ample power to operate the heater, the command triggered the fault protection system. The

Read more on manchestereveningnews.co.uk
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