35 years later, Voyager 1 is heading for the stars

Steve Williams

Site Founder, Site Owner, Administrator
By ALICIA CHANG, AP

PASADENA, Calif. — Thirty-five years after leaving Earth, Voyager 1 is reaching for the stars.

Sooner or later, the workhorse spacecraft will bid adieu to the solar system and enter a new realm of space — the first time a manmade object will have escaped to the other side.

Perhaps no one on Earth will relish the moment more than 76-year-old Ed Stone, who has toiled on the project from the start.

"We're anxious to get outside and find what's out there," he said.

When NASA's Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 first rocketed out of Earth's grip in 1977, no one knew how long they would live. Now, they are the longest-operating spacecraft in history and the most distant, at billions of miles from Earth but in different directions.

Wednesday marks the 35th anniversary of Voyager 1's launch to Jupiter and Saturn. It is now flitting around the fringes of the solar system, which is enveloped in a giant plasma bubble. This hot and turbulent area is created by a stream of charged particles from the sun.

Outside the bubble is a new frontier in the Milky Way — the space between stars. Once it plows through, scientists expect a calmer environment by comparison.

When that would happen is anyone's guess. Voyager 1 is in uncharted celestial territory. One thing is clear: The boundary that separates the solar system and interstellar space is near, but it could take days, months or years to cross that milestone.

Voyager 1 is currently more than 11 billion miles from the sun. Twin Voyager 2, which celebrated its launch anniversary two weeks ago, trails behind at 9 billion miles from the sun.

They're still ticking despite being relics of the early Space Age.

Each only has 68 kilobytes of computer memory. To put that in perspective, the smallest iPod — an 8-gigabyte iPod Nano — is 100,000 times more powerful. Each also has an eight-track tape recorder. Today's spacecraft use digital memory.

The Voyagers' original goal was to tour Jupiter and Saturn, and they sent back postcards of Jupiter's big red spot and Saturn's glittery rings. They also beamed home a torrent of discoveries: erupting volcanoes on the Jupiter moon Io; hints of an ocean below the icy surface of Europa, another Jupiter moon; signs of methane rain on the Saturn moon Titan.

Voyager 2 then journeyed to Uranus and Neptune. It remains the only spacecraft to fly by these two outer planets. Voyager 1 used Saturn as a gravitational slingshot to catapult itself toward the edge of the solar system.

"Time after time, Voyager revealed unexpected — kind of counterintuitive — results, which means we have a lot to learn," said Stone, Voyager's chief scientist and a professor of physics at the California Institute of Technology.

These days, a handful of engineers diligently listen for the Voyagers from a satellite campus not far from the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which built the spacecraft.

The control room, with its cubicles and carpeting, could be mistaken for an insurance office if not for a blue sign overhead that reads "Mission Controller" and a warning on a computer: "Voyager mission critical hardware. Please do not touch!"

There are no full-time scientists left on the mission, but 20 part-timers analyze the data streamed back. Since the spacecraft are so far out, it takes 17 hours for a radio signal from Voyager 1 to travel to Earth. For Voyager 2, it takes about 13 hours.

Cameras aboard the Voyagers were turned off long ago. The nuclear-powered spacecraft, about the size of a subcompact car, still have five instruments to study magnetic fields, cosmic rays and charged particles from the sun known as solar wind. They also carry gold-plated discs containing multilingual greetings, music and pictures — in the off chance that intelligent species come across them.

Since 2004, Voyager 1 has been exploring a region in the bubble at the solar system's edge where the solar wind dramatically slows and heats up. Over the last several months, scientists have seen changes that suggest Voyager 1 is on the verge of crossing over.

When it does, it will be the first spacecraft to explore between the stars. Space observatories such as the Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes have long peered past the solar system, but they tend to focus on far-away galaxies.

As ambitious as the Voyager mission is, it was scaled down from a plan to send a quartet of spacecraft to Jupiter, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto in what was billed as the "grand tour" of the solar system. But the plan was nixed, and scientists settled for the Voyager mission.

American University space policy expert Howard McCurdy said it turned out to be a boon.

They "took the funds and built spacecraft robust enough to visit all four gas giants and keep communicating" beyond the solar system, McCurdy said.

The double missions so far have cost $983 million in 1977 dollars, which translates to $3.7 billion now. The spacecraft have enough fuel to last until around 2020.

By that time, scientists hope Voyager will already be floating between the stars.
 

amirm

Banned
Apr 2, 2010
15,813
38
0
Seattle, WA
Remarkable how we are able to build reliable instruments when we put our mind (and money) behind it.
 

Steve Williams

Site Founder, Site Owner, Administrator
What I find even more remarkable is that each craft only has 68 kilobytes of computer memory. To put that in perspective, the smallest iPod — an 8-gigabyte iPod Nano — is 100,000 times more powerful. Each also has an eight-track tape recorder. Today's spacecraft use digital memory.
 

LenWhite

Well-Known Member
Feb 11, 2011
424
72
375
Florida
systems.audiogon.com
It would appear earthlings are going to have to develop a much more sophisticated propulsion system to explore intergalactic space given it took 35 years for Voyager 1 to reach the frontier of our own solar system. Still together with Apollo 11, it's a remarkable scientific achievement during our lifetime, especially considering the technology that was employed.
 

MasterChief

Well-Known Member
Jun 26, 2012
253
58
935
Sweden
A fantastic achievement but..."heading for the stars" is kind of a overstatement. None of the Voyagers are heading toward any particular star. They are just traveling through space. And they have travelled 17 light hours. The nearest star is 4,2 lightyears away. So only 0,05% of the distance to Proxima Centauri (the nearest star) in 35 years. This is not easy for a SF-fan like me to handle (no, I don´t mean Sonus Faber). I want WARP-speed now!

But of course, it is still one of the greatest human achievements of all time.
 

microstrip

VIP/Donor
May 30, 2010
20,807
4,702
2,790
Portugal
They also carry gold-plated discs containing multilingual greetings, music and pictures — in the off chance that intelligent species come across them.

Steve,

While committees are debating if the next mission should carry PCM or DSD recordings the LP rules! :rolleyes:
 

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FrantzM

Member Sponsor & WBF Founding Member
Apr 20, 2010
6,455
29
405
A fantastic achievement but..."heading for the stars" is kind of a overstatement. None of the Voyagers are heading toward any particular star. They are just traveling through space. And they have travelled 17 light hours. The nearest star is 4,2 lightyears away. So only 0,05% of the distance to Proxima Centauri (the nearest star) in 35 years. This is not easy for a SF-fan like me to handle (no, I don´t mean Sonus Faber). I want WARP-speed now!

But of course, it is still one of the greatest human achievements of all time.

Same here huge SF Fan too , no not Sonus either :)... When you put it in perspective .. We may never reach the stars ... Then again 200 years ago who would have foreseen Quantum Physics? Likely not in our Lifetime though :(
 

MylesBAstor

Well-Known Member
Apr 20, 2010
11,238
81
1,725
New York City
Same here huge SF Fan too , no not Sonus either :)... When you put it in perspective .. We may never reach the stars ... Then again 200 years ago who would have foreseen Quantum Physics? Likely not in our Lifetime though :(

Among the many issues preventing human interplanetary or interstellar flight it that of radiation effects! Shielding weight is prohibitive eg. the amount of fuel needed for such a ship is prodigious.
 

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