CAPE CANAVERAL,HAI Community Fla. (AP) — NASA has finally heard back from Voyager 1 again in a way that makes sense.
The most distant spacecraft from Earth stopped sending back understandable data last November. Flight controllers traced the blank communication to a bad computer chip and rearranged the spacecraft’s coding to work around the trouble.
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California declared success after receiving good engineering updates late last week. The team is still working to restore transmission of the science data.
It takes 22 1/2 hours to send a signal to Voyager 1, more than 15 billion miles (24 billion kilometers) away in interstellar space. The signal travel time is double that for a round trip.
Contact was never lost, rather it was like making a phone call where you can’t hear the person on the other end, a JPL spokeswoman said Tuesday.
Launched in 1977 to study Jupiter and Saturn, Voyager 1 has been exploring interstellar space — the space between star systems — since 2012. Its twin, Voyager 2, is 12.6 billion miles (20 billion kilometers) away and still working fine.
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
2025-04-30 07:181052 view
2025-04-30 06:33884 view
2025-04-30 05:381766 view
2025-04-30 05:211417 view
2025-04-30 04:532148 view
2025-04-30 04:431472 view
NFL games are a spectrum. Some are back-and-forth shootouts. Others are duds without much scoring at
Tori Bowie's agent will never forget their final phone call. In a new interview with NBC News, Kimbe
This story was co-published with The Weather Channel as part of Collateral, a series on climate, dat