Voyager 1 contact restored
Voyager 1 contact restored
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2024/04/22/nasa-voyager-1-contact-restored-distant-space-probe/73414431007/Open linkView original on lemmy.world563
Comments36Voyager 1 contact restored
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2024/04/22/nasa-voyager-1-contact-restored-distant-space-probe/73414431007/Open linkView original on lemmy.world
That is truly amazing.
I was hoping they would say in this article what they did to fix it!
The actual news release has a bit more information.
Source: https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/nasas-voyager-1-resumes-sending-engineering-updates-to-earth
That's incredible. It also reminds me of the episode of Star Trek Deep Space 9 where they need to find space to store a bunch of people's transporter patterns, so they just dump them into the stations computer, replacing everything that used to be there lol
NASA engineers, man.
It interesting that the memory is so discrete that it can be reprogrammed when a single ROM fails. And it’s really neat that they made the whole thing accessible to a radio controlled boot loader. The planning that went into building and maintaining Voyager is really incredible.
I wonder if we could still build one as robust these days?
Wait how did they do all that WITHOUT contact?
The problem was that Voyager sent junk data back to us due to a memory fault. It was still responsive to receive updates from Earth and to pings.
Pinging Voyager 1 takes about 2 days, so testing updates is naturally quite slow.
Not only round trip time, the hardware only supports bandwidth of 160bps at this range. Down from the 21.6kbps at launch.
Im guessing it could still listen just not talk back
Edit read the article
It's simple rocket science
This Satelite must offer option to install software updates over the air, so they modified software and slowly uploaded it to the satelite.
rust programmers couldn't imagine the memory hacks smh
I know that this is supposed to be a joke, and I do find it funny, but I also find it sad that it carries a large dose of truth. C is such a "low-level" high-level language that it makes you deal directly with memory allocation and management as well as pointer arithmetic to advance addresses in the stack, which in my opinion is very important for programmers to gain an understanding of the actual hardware and architecture their programs are running on, because I feel that many don't have that understanding. Should Rust replace C in many applications, especially low-level, I fear that we will ultimately end up with worse code because of that. (BTW I know that Voyager's program is not written in C, this is just purely about your statement on Rust.)
C will never fully go away.
Constrained environments will always remain in C.
But RUST offers the best trade off today. It is way better than C++.
C IMO is not comparable to RUST.
Can we appreciate how they can basically change software of this 45y/o satelite over the air? Original designers thought everything through
That was awesome!
They just kept wiggling the coat hanger until the signal cleared up
It was much more complicated than that.
They also had to wrap half a roll of tin foil around the antennas.
Very cool, especially that the expertise still exists within NASA to understand and debug almost 50 year old code from a now ancient seeming architecture. They are probably training their people assigned to the Voyager mission in these things.
They should hire people who are still making homebrew games for old consoles.
Was thinking that it might come to be that we lose the ability before Vger does.
Amazing. Sad That the 47000 curios of plutonio 238 in the RTG will be depleted by 2025 :(
Is it a fixed number or just estimate? I'd like to keep my hope up if possible.
Radioactive materials have a half-life, which means every X number of days/months/years, the material will have decayed to half its initial size. This continually happens, so while something might start at say 100g and have a 10 day half life, 10 days later it is 50g, 10 days later 25g, 10 days later 12.5g, 10 days later 6.25g, etc. This will continue forever until there is literally one atom left, at which point it is random chance when the atom would decay.
Voyager launched with 3 Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generators, each with 4.5kg of Pu238 which generated 157 watts of usable electric power at launch, for a total of 471 watts
It will be half that in 87.7 years (235W) . And half that (117W) in another 87.7.
The problem comes from the amount of power necessary to run the craft and it's radio. While the generators might continue to run for practically forever, at some point they just don't produce enough power to keep everything working. Its official mission is expected to end in 2025, but it's generators are expected to be able to power it's instruments for another ~10 years
Just a reminder that half-life is a probabilistic measurement, not an exact one. Given adequate scale of material it’s accurate across the measured sample, but it is not precise at lower volumes of material or in narrower measurement periods.
Estmate , around 2025. It depends on so many tings I guess , they are constantly doing enhancements to it since the beginning and that could make it last a little bit longer, but not much more I think.
This is GREAT news.
Well alright, but if memory serves, it's Voyager 6 we have to be worried about.
What's up with Voyager 6?
https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/V%27ger
I should have known it was star trek lmao
I'm now sad to learn we only did Voyager 1 & 2.:(
Lessons from the future were clearly learned.
Only so far, there's still time.
Thank the whales!