This is the best summary I could come up with:
NASA lost contact with its Voyager 2 spacecraft—the second-most distant object ever built by humans and flung into space—nearly two weeks ago due to an errant command sent to the probe.
The mission’s scientists believed they had several options to restore communications with the half-century-old probe.
NASA’s Deep Space Network facility in Canberra, Australia, was able to send a “shout” command to Voyager instructing the spacecraft to reorient itself into a proper position to facilitate communication with Earth.
Shortly after midnight on Friday morning, at 12:29 am ET, Voyager 2 started streaming back science and telemetry data.
Prior to the launch of Voyager 1 and 2 in 1977 on two different rockets, humans had been gazing at fuzzy blobs in the outer Solar System for hundreds of years.
The Voyagers uncovered complex planetary systems and incredible moons, such as volcano-covered Io, icy Europa, and Titan, with its methane seas.
I’m a bot and I’m open source!
- twhite ( @twhite@lemmy.ml ) 16•1 year ago
Echoing Ton,
Wow this is so exciting!
For the controls team to suggest they have “multiple options” to re-establish comms on a satellite launched in the 70s that is appx. 133AU from earth is truly astounding.
And of those options that a “shout” worked is so neat.
Makes me giddy to think about satellites launched recently and in the near future and how well they may fair in comparison.
- csfirecracker ( @csfirecracker@lemmyf.uk ) 13•1 year ago
I’m so pleased about this. With all the bleak news lately it’s brightened my day
- HeneryHawk ( @HeneryHawk@thelemmy.club ) 9•1 year ago
Hello, fellow kids
- Elise ( @xilliah@beehaw.org ) 6•1 year ago
I once had that with windows update
- jerome ( @jerome@kbin.social ) 5•1 year ago
good. I hope it’s eating well and has change for laundry.
- bionicjoey ( @bionicjoey@lemmy.ca ) 3•1 year ago
Of course it is. It’s pretty far from the sun at this point. Hopefully the RTG is keeping it warm…