Beyond Earth: Voyager 1 Sends Usable Data Back to NASA After Months of Gurgling Transmission

Voyager Returns to Translating Meaningful Data After Months of Incoherent Signals: ScienceAlert

Voyager 1, the farthest human-made object in the universe, is now sending usable data back to Earth after months of transmitting garbled information, NASA announced on Monday. The spacecraft had stopped sending readable data back to Earth on November 14, 2023, but controllers knew it was still receiving their commands. In March, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory team discovered that a faulty chip was causing the issue and devised a coding fix that worked within the spacecraft’s memory constraints.

Now, Voyager 1 is providing data on its engineering systems’ health and plans to start sending scientific data soon. Launched in 1977, Voyager 1 became the first spacecraft from Earth to enter the interstellar medium in 2012 and is currently over 15 billion miles away from Earth. Messages from Earth take about 22.5 hours to reach the spacecraft, highlighting the immense distance it has traveled.

Both Voyager spacecraft carry “Golden Records,” containing a variety of information about Earth intended for potential extraterrestrial encounters. These records include a map of our solar system, a piece of uranium for dating purposes, and instructions on how to play the record. The selections for the Golden Records were chosen by a committee headed by Carl Sagan and include encoded images of life on Earth, music, and sounds that can be played with a stylus.

Despite their incredible journey, the Voyager spacecraft’s power banks are expected to run out sometime after 2025. Once their power is depleted, they will continue to drift through the Milky Way in silence, potentially for eternity.

Leave a Reply