Voyager - The Ultimate Remote Communication Device
On my continuing quest to get RF working in the entire Audioholics showcase home so I can operate all of my theater equipment from the furthest reaches of my bathroom, I am perplexed that I still don’t have a 100% reliable system. Meanwhile, over 30 years ago, NASA successfully launched two Voyager probes that are, to this day, still fully functional and transmitting signals back to earth at over 3 times the distance of Pluto! With that, they even included records made from solid gold in hopes to assimilate aliens into the wonderful world of audiophile nirvana or the non tech geeks may refer to as neurosis.
NASA's two
venerable Voyager spacecraft are celebrating three decades of flight as they
head toward interstellar space. Their ongoing odysseys mark an unprecedented
and historic accomplishment. Voyager 2 launched on Aug. 20,
1977, and
Voyager 1 launched on Sept. 5, 1977. They continue to return
information from distances more than three times farther away than Pluto.
"The
Voyager mission is a legend in the annals of space exploration. It opened our
eyes to the scientific richness of the outer solar system, and it has pioneered
the deepest exploration of the sun's domain ever conducted," said Alan
Stern, associate administrator for NASA's Science Mission Directorate,
Washington. "It's a testament to Voyager's designers, builders and
operators that both spacecraft continue to deliver important findings more than
25 years after their primary mission to Jupiter and Saturn concluded."
During their first dozen years of flight, the Voyagers made detailed
explorations of Jupiter, Saturn, and their moons, and conducted the first
explorations of Uranus and Neptune. The Voyagers returned never-before-seen
images and scientific data, making fundamental discoveries about the outer
planets and their moons. The spacecraft revealed Jupiter's turbulent
atmosphere, which includes dozens of interacting hurricane-like storm systems,
and erupting volcanoes on Jupiter's moon Io. They also showed waves and fine
structure in Saturn's icy rings from the tugs of nearby moons.
For the past 18 years, the twin Voyagers have been probing the sun's outer
heliosphere and its boundary with interstellar space. Both Voyagers remain
healthy and are returning scientific data 30 years after their launches.
Voyager 1 currently is the farthest human-made object, traveling at a distance
from the sun of about 15.5 billion kilometers (9.7 billion miles). Voyager 2 is
about 12.5 billion kilometers (7.8 billion miles) from the sun. Originally
designed as a four-year mission to Jupiter and Saturn, the Voyager tours were
extended because of their successful achievements and a rare planetary
alignment. The two-planet mission eventually became a four-planet grand tour.
After completing that extended mission, the two spacecraft began the task of
exploring the outer heliosphere.
"The Voyager mission has opened up our solar system in a way not possible
before the Space Age," said Edward Stone, Voyager project scientist at the
California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif. "It revealed our
neighbors in the outer solar system and showed us how much there is to learn
and how diverse the bodies are that share the solar system with our own planet
Earth."
In December 2004, Voyager 1 began crossing the solar system's final frontier.
Called the heliosheath, this turbulent area, approximately 14 billion
kilometers (8.7 billion miles) from the sun, is where the solar wind slows as
it crashes into the thin gas that fills the space between stars. Voyager 2
could reach this boundary later this year, putting both Voyagers on their final
leg toward interstellar space.
Each spacecraft carries five fully functioning science instruments that study
the solar wind, energetic particles, magnetic fields and radio waves as they
cruise through this unexplored region of deep space. The spacecraft are too far
from the sun to use solar power. They run on less than 300 watts, the amount of
power needed to light up a bright light bulb or a modest home theater receiver.
Their long-lived radioisotope thermoelectric generators provide the power.
"The continued operation of these spacecraft and the flow of data to the
scientists is a testament to the skills and dedication of the small operations
team," said Ed Massey, Voyager project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. Massey oversees a team of nearly a dozen people
in the day-to-day Voyager spacecraft operations.
The Voyagers call home via NASA's Deep Space Network, a system of antennas
around the world. The spacecraft are so distant that commands from Earth,
traveling at light speed, take 14 hours one-way to reach Voyager 1 and 12 hours
to reach Voyager 2. Each Voyager logs approximately 1 million miles per day. Now
that’s what I call fast (over 41,000MPH)!
Each of the Voyagers carries a golden record that is a time capsule with
greetings, images and sounds from Earth. So if aliens intercept our probe, they
will interpret us humans as being audiophiles. The records also have directions
on how to find Earth if the spacecraft is recovered by something or someone. This also makes it easier for assimilation
should the aliens be hostile or wish to convert us to all to listening to
compressed music streams.
NASA's latest outer planet exploration mission is New Horizons, which is now
well past Jupiter and headed for a historic exploration of the Pluto system in
July 2015.
For a complete listing of Voyager discoveries and mission information, visit
the Internet at:
http://www.nasa.gov/voyager and http://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/
JPL manages the Voyager mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate. NASA's Lewis Research Center (now Glenn Research Center) in Cleveland, Ohio, managed the launches of the
Voyager spacecraft.