NASA’s Voyager 1 Resumes Sending Engineering Updates
to Earth
April 22, 2024
NASA’s
Voyager 1 spacecraft is depicted in this artist’s concept traveling through
interstellar space, or the space between stars, which it entered in 2012.
Credit:
NASA/JPL-Caltech
After some inventive sleuthing, the mission team can —
for the first time in five months — check the health and status of the most
distant human-made object in existence.
For
the first time since November,
NASA’s Voyager 1 spacecraft is returning usable data about the health and
status of its onboard engineering systems. The next step is to enable the
spacecraft to begin returning science data again. The probe and its twin,
Voyager 2, are the only spacecraft to ever fly in interstellar space (the space
between stars).
Voyager
1 stopped sending readable science and engineering data back to Earth on Nov.
14, 2023, even though mission controllers could tell the spacecraft was still
receiving their commands and otherwise operating normally. In March, the
Voyager engineering team at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern
California confirmed that the issue was tied to one of the spacecraft’s three
onboard computers, called the flight data subsystem (FDS). The FDS is
responsible for packaging the science and engineering data before it’s sent to
Earth.
After
receiving data about the health and status of Voyager 1 for the first time in
five months, members of the Voyager flight team celebrate in a conference room
at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory on April 20.
Credit:
NASA/JPL-Caltech
The team
discovered that a single chip responsible for
storing a portion of the FDS memory — including some of the FDS computer’s
software code — isn’t working. The loss of that code rendered the science and
engineering data unusable. Unable to repair the chip, the team decided to place
the affected code elsewhere in the FDS memory. But no single location is large
enough to hold the section of code in its entirety.
So
they devised a plan to divide the affected code into sections and store those
sections in different places in the FDS. To make this plan work, they also
needed to adjust those code sections to ensure, for example, that they all
still function as a whole. Any references to the location of that code in other
parts of the FDS memory needed to be updated as well.
The
team started by singling out the code responsible for packaging the
spacecraft’s engineering data. They sent it to its new location in the FDS
memory on April 18. A radio signal takes about 22 ½ hours to reach Voyager 1,
which is over 15 billion miles (24 billion kilometers) from Earth, and another
22 ½ hours for a signal to come back to Earth. When the mission flight team
heard back from the spacecraft on April 20, they saw that the modification
worked: For the first time in five months, they have been able to check the
health and status of the spacecraft.
During
the coming weeks, the team will relocate and adjust the other affected portions
of the FDS software. These include the portions that will start returning
science data.
Voyager
2 continues to operate normally. Launched over 46 years
ago,
the twin Voyager spacecraft are the longest-running and most distant spacecraft
in history. Before the start of their interstellar exploration, both probes
flew by Saturn and Jupiter, and Voyager 2 flew by Uranus and Neptune.
Caltech
in Pasadena, California, manages JPL for NASA.
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