View Full Version here: : voyager 1 & 2
Analog6
18-12-2010, 07:06 PM
are still going! Article (http://www.smh.com.au/world/science/far-out-voyager-puts-wind-up-theorists-again-20101217-190qv.html) in the SMH today.
As one is 17.5 billion and one 14 billion kms from earth, how long would those signals be taking to get to earth?
Hans Tucker
18-12-2010, 07:21 PM
From the articles I have been reading on Voyager 1 it takes around 16 hours to receive data back to earth.
Blue Skies
18-12-2010, 07:25 PM
A back of the envelope calculation gives me 13 hours for 14 billion kms and 16 hours for 17.5 billion km. Pluto is about light 4 hours away by comparison.
astroron
18-12-2010, 07:33 PM
My Two favourite Space Craft:thumbsup:
Just imagine still going till 2020:eyepop:
Thanks for posting Odille:thanx:
Esseth
18-12-2010, 07:39 PM
Yeah have to give them a nod of respect don't you.
tlgerdes
18-12-2010, 09:22 PM
One day the Star Trek movie may come true.:scared3:
:lol::lol: I know, I thought of that too when I read that article a couple of days ago.
Interesting stuff though. :)
flyingbaby
18-12-2010, 10:29 PM
Cant believe the nuclear power can perform so well and so long and the heater on board work flawlessly for so many years....
bartman
19-12-2010, 07:20 AM
To Infinity and Beyond!!!!
I was reading an article the other day where one of the Voyagers' has now passed beyond the influence of the solar wind and has moved into what is considered interstellar space.
That's a long way from home for sure.
Cheers
CraigS
19-12-2010, 09:12 AM
Some comparative position info on Pioneers 10 & 11, Voyagers 1 & 2 and New Horizons here. (http://www.heavens-above.com/solar-escape.asp)
As at Dec 18, 2010, Voyager 1 is still winning in the speed department (relative to the Sun).
Also interesting is the power situation. Wiki says ..
As the power diminishes, they have to turn off loads.
The Telemetry rates are painfully slow by today's standards, also .. real time feeds operate at about 600 bps down to 40 bps. Recorded info download is higher though, at 7.2 kbps or 1.4kbps.
One of them seems to have developed a permanent 'bit flip' problem which caused a 2 week data loss, mid this year. - No wonder the Enterprise had problems in communicating .. the Klingons learned the hard way, too !
Didn't 'Vega' end up getting the girl in the movie ?
:)
Cheers
Analog6
19-12-2010, 12:02 PM
They have certainly turned into the little spacecraft that could!
Kevnool
19-12-2010, 04:14 PM
Yep they built them tough back then.
Cheers Kev.
AstralTraveller
19-12-2010, 06:11 PM
What a journey! I've just realised that the Voyagers were launched a couple of months before I met my better half. Sort of puts the time frame in perspective for me.
tlgerdes
19-12-2010, 09:16 PM
It was V'Ger, not Vega :screwy:
CraigS
20-12-2010, 03:18 PM
Don't worry 'bout it Trevor … I was saying "V'Ger" in my mind … I just didn't know how to translate it into text !!
:)
Found an article (http://www.physorg.com/news/2010-12-solar-voyager-spacecraft.html), dated Dec 13:
… don't take this the wrong way here, Ric ... I'm only quoting this to make the point that it seems they're still defining the boundary conditions … courtesy of the live data sent back … all from a 33 year old spacecraft !
(I would've said it was interstellar space before I read this, also).
Awesome stuff … it is still telling us what to make of it all !!
Amazing stuff !!
Hats off to the guys who built these things .. I think Ed Stone, who is mentioned in the article, is one of the original designers (?) !!
I'll bet they never factored these discoveries into the 'business case' for the Voyager project, before the project began !
Cheers
No worries Craig, four years will pass pretty quickly.
It's amazing to think how far the Sun's influence does extend.
Cheers
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