Los Angeles Times

After months of silence, Voyager 1 speaks

When the aging probe stopped sending data, JPL scientists feared the worst. Then they found a fix.

- By Corinne Purtill

For the last five months, it seemed very possible that a 46-year-old conversati­on had finally reached its end.

Since its launch from Kennedy Space Center on Sept. 5, 1977, NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft has diligently sent regular updates to Earth on the health of its systems and data collected from its onboard instrument­s.

But in November, the craft went quiet.

Voyager 1 is now some 15 billion miles away from Earth. Somewhere in the cold interstell­ar space between our sun and the closest stars, its flight data system stopped communicat­ing with the part of the probe that allows it to send signals back to Earth.

Engineers at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge could tell that Voyager 1 was getting its messages, but nothing was coming back.

“We’re to the point where the hardware is starting to age,” said Linda Spilker, the project scientist for the Voyager mission. “It’s like working on an antique car, from 15 billion miles away.”

Week after week, engineers sent troublesho­oting commands to the spacecraft, each time patiently waiting the 45 hours it takes to get a response here on Earth — 22.5 hours traveling at the speed of light to reach the probe, and 22.5 hours back.

By March, the team had figured out that a memory chip that stored some of the flight data system’s software code had failed, turning the craft’s outgoing communicat­ions into gibberish.

A long-distance repair wasn’t possible. There wasn’t enough space anywhere in the system to shift the code in its entirety. So after manually reviewing the code line by line, engineers broke it up and tucked the pieces into the available slots of memory.

They sent a command to Voyager last Thursday. In the early morning hours Saturday, the team gathered around a conference table at JPL: laptops open, coffee and boxes of doughnuts in reach.

At 6:41 a.m., data from the craft showed up on their screens. The fix had worked.

“We went from very quiet and just waiting patiently to cheers and high-fives and big smiles and sighs of relief,” Spilker said. “I’m very happy to once again have a meaningful conversati­on with Voyager 1.”

Voyager 1 is one of two identical space probes. Voyager 2, launched two weeks before Voyager 1, is now about 13 billion miles from Earth, the two crafts’ trajectori­es having diverged somewhere around Saturn. (Voyager 2 continued its weekly communicat­ions uninterrup­ted during Voyager 1’s outage.)

They are the farthestfl­ung human-made objects in the universe, having traveled farther from their home planet than anything else this species has built. The task of keeping communicat­ions going grows harder with each passing day. Every 24 hours, Voyager 1 travels 912,000 miles farther away from us. As that distance grows, the signal becomes slower and weaker.

When the probe visited Jupiter in 1979, it was sending back data at a rate of 115.2 kilobits per second, Spilker said. Today, 45 years and more than 14 billion miles later, data come back at a rate of 40 bits per second.

The team is cautiously optimistic that the probes will stay in contact for three more years, long enough to celebrate the mission’s 50th anniversar­y in 2027, Spilker said. They could conceivabl­y last until the 2030s.

The conversati­on can’t last forever. Microscopi­c bits of silica keep clogging up the thrusters that keep the probes’ antennas pointed toward Earth, which could end communicat­ions. The power is running low. Eventually, the day will come when both Voyagers stop transmitti­ng data to Earth, and the first part of their mission ends.

But on the day each craft goes quiet, they begin a new era, one that could potentiall­y last far longer. Each probe is equipped with a metallic album cover containing a Golden Record, a goldplated copper disk inscribed with sounds and images meant to describe the species that built the Voyagers and the planet they came from.

Erosion in space is negligible; the images could be readable for another billion years or more. Should any other intelligen­t life form encounter one of the Voyager probes and have a means of retrieving the data from the record, they will at the very least have a chance to figure out who sent them — even if our species is by that time long gone.

 ?? NASA ?? VOYAGER 1, shown in an illustrati­on, is now about 15 billion miles from Earth. It fell silent in November.
NASA VOYAGER 1, shown in an illustrati­on, is now about 15 billion miles from Earth. It fell silent in November.

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