Get the latest tech news

Voyager 1 Team Accomplishes Tricky Thruster Swap


Engineers working on NASA’s Voyager 1 probe have successfully mitigated an issue with the spacecraft’s thrusters, which keep the distant explorer pointed at Earth so that it can receive commands, send engineering data, and provide the unique science data it is gathering. After 47 years, a fuel tube inside the thrusters has become clogged with silicon dioxide, a byproduct that appears with age from a rubber diaphragm in the spacecraft’s fuel tank.

The thrusters are fueled by liquid hydrazine, which is turned into gases and released in tens-of-milliseconds-long puffs to gently tilt the spacecraft’s antenna toward Earth. The mission has turned off all non-essential onboard systems, including some heaters, on both spacecraft to conserve their gradually shrinking electrical power supply, which is generated by decaying plutonium. While those steps have worked to reduce power, they have also led to the spacecraft growing colder, an effect compounded by the loss of other non-essential systems that produced heat.

Get the Android app

Or read this on r/technology

Read more on:

Photo of team

team

Photo of voyager

voyager

Photo of tricky thruster swap

tricky thruster swap

Related news:

News photo

China-US team creates nano-plant drug for deadliest brain cancer | South China Morning Post

News photo

China-US team creates plant-based nanoparticles to fight deadliest brain cancer | These nanoparticles are designed to penetrate the blood-brain barrier and target tumor cells directly.

News photo

China-US team creates plant-based nanoparticles to fight deadliest brain cancer | These nanoparticles are designed to penetrate the blood-brain barrier and target tumor cells directly.