MEDIA
RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Voyager Mission Status
November 17, 1998
The Voyager 2 spacecraft, now on the outer fringes of the
solar system, was returned to normal flight operations Saturday,
November 14, after a 66-hour communications black-out which
began abruptly on Thursday, November 12.
Ground controllers at the Deep Space Network station near
Madrid, Spain, lost Voyager 2's signal on Wednesday night
at about 11:57 p.m. Pacific Standard Time (07:57 Universal
Time Thursday). At the time, the spacecraft was in the process
of shutting down power to its scan platform which contains
science instruments, including the ultraviolet spectrometer.
Preliminary analysis indicated that the commands were properly
sent to the spacecraft.
Turning off the scan platform is part of a power conservation
plan to keep Voyager 2 operating until at least the year 2020.
There are still five experiments operating on Voyager 2: the
cosmic ray instrument, low-energy charged particle instrument,
plasma science instrument, plasma wave instrument and the
magnetometer. As the spacecraft's onboard plutonium power
source decays, it is necessary to periodically reduce the
spacecraft electrical power usage in order to maintain an
adequate power margin.
About 720 commands were sent Thursday to turn on the spacecraft's
X-band transmitter; however, communication with the spacecraft
was not immediately reestablished. Subsequent analysis of
the probable failure modes suggested the spacecraft's onboard
S-band exciter, a small oscillator used to generate the spacecraft's
carrier frequencies, could have been shut off. About 360 commands
were sent Friday evening to turn the spacecraft's S- band
exciter back on.
The flight team reacquired the spacecraft's signal Saturday
evening at approximately 6:18 p.m. Pacific Standard Time (02:18
Universal Time on Sunday). Telemetry had been switched to
a data rate of 40 bits per second from the standard operating
rate of 160 bits per second. Spacecraft systems were functioning
normally, although some hardware components were slightly
warmer than expected. The flight team reported that the backup
X-band transmitter was on at the time of signal reacquisition.
Subsequent analysis of the spacecraft computer memory showed
that the scan platform power-down sequence had executed exactly
as planned. The team will continue to analyze data to determine
the cause of signal loss.
Voyager 2 is departing the solar system at 48 degrees to the
south of the ecliptic plane at a speed of 15.9 kilometers
per second (35,000 miles per hour). Round-trip light time
from Earth to Voyager 2 is currently about 16 hours. The spacecraft
is now 8.4 billion kilometers (5.2 billion miles) from Earth,
or more than 56 times farther from the Sun than Earth is.
Its twin, Voyager 1, the most distant human-made object in
space, is healthy and operating normally. Voyager 1 is leaving
Earth's neighborhood at 35 degrees to the north of the ecliptic
plane at a speed of about 17.3 kilometers per second (38,752
miles per hour). Voyager 1 is currently 10.8 billion kilometers
(6.7 billion miles) from Earth.