Science NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft is talking nonsense. Its friends on Earth are worried - It's as if the aging spacecraft has suffered some kind of stroke that's interfering with its ability to speak.

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This artist's impression shows one of the Voyager spacecraft moving through the darkness of space.
NASA/JPL-Caltech


The last time Stamatios "Tom" Krimigis saw the Voyager 1 space probe in person, it was the summer of 1977, just before it launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Now Voyager 1 is over 15 billion miles away, beyond what many consider to be the edge of the solar system. Yet the on-board instrument Krimigis is in charge of is still going strong.

"I am the most surprised person in the world," says Krimigis — after all, the spacecraft's original mission to Jupiter and Saturn was only supposed to last about four years.

These days, though, he's also feeling another emotion when he thinks of Voyager 1.

"Frankly, I'm very worried," he says.

Ever since mid-November, the Voyager 1 spacecraft has been sending messages back to Earth that don't make any sense. It's as if the aging spacecraft has suffered some kind of stroke that's interfering with its ability to speak.

"It basically stopped talking to us in a coherent manner," says Suzanne Dodd of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, who has been the project manager for the Voyager interstellar mission since 2010. "It's a serious problem."

Instead of sending messages home in binary code, Voyager 1 is now just sending back alternating 1s and 0s. Dodd's team has tried the usual tricks to reset things — with no luck.

It looks like there's a problem with the onboard computer that takes data and packages it up to send back home. All of this computer technology is primitive compared to, say, the key fob that unlocks your car, says Dodd.

"The button you press to open the door of your car, that has more compute power than the Voyager spacecrafts do," she says. "It's remarkable that they keep flying, and that they've flown for 46-plus years."

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Each of the Voyager probes carries an American flag and a copy of a golden record that can play greetings in many languages.
NASA/JPL-Caltec
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Voyager 1 and its twin, Voyager 2, have outlasted many of those who designed and built them. So to try to fix Voyager 1's current woes, the dozen or so people on Dodd's team have had to pore over yellowed documents and old mimeographs.

"They're doing a lot of work to try and get into the heads of the original developers and figure out why they designed something the way they did and what we could possibly try that might give us some answers to what's going wrong with the spacecraft," says Dodd.

She says that they do have a list of possible fixes. As time goes on, they'll likely start sending commands to Voyager 1 that are more bold and risky.

"The things that we will do going forward are probably more challenging in the sense that you can't tell exactly if it's going to execute correctly — or if you're going to maybe do something you didn't want to do, inadvertently," says Dodd.

Linda Spilker, who serves as the Voyager mission's project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, says that when she comes to work she sees "all of these circuit diagrams up on the wall with sticky notes attached. And these people are just having a great time trying to troubleshoot, you know, the 60's and 70's technology."

"I'm cautiously optimistic," she says. "There's a lot of creativity there."

Still, this is a painstaking process that could take weeks, or even months. Voyager 1 is so distant, it takes almost a whole day for a signal to travel out there, and then a whole day for its response to return.

"We'll keep trying," says Dodd, "and it won't be quick."

In the meantime, Voyager's 1 discombobulation is a bummer for researchers like Stella Ocker, an astronomer with Caltech and the Carnegie Observatories

"We haven't been getting science data since this anomaly started," says Ocker, "and what that means is that we don't know what the environment that the spacecraft is traveling through looks like."

That interstellar environment isn't just empty darkness, she says. It contains stuff like gas, dust, and cosmic rays. Only the twin Voyager probes are far out enough to sample this cosmic stew.

"The science that I'm really interested in doing is actually only possible with Voyager 1," says Ocker, because Voyager 2 — despite being generally healthy for its advanced age — can't take the particular measurements she needs for her research.

Even if NASA's experts and consultants somehow come up with a miraculous plan that can get Voyager 1 back to normal, its time is running out.

The two Voyager probes are powered by plutonium, but that power system will eventually run out of juice. Mission managers have turned off heaters and taken other measures to conserve power and extend the Voyager probes' lifespan.

"My motto for a long time was 50 years or bust," says Krimigis with a laugh, "but we're sort of approaching that."

In a couple of years, the ebbing power supply will force managers to start turning off science instruments, one by one. The very last instrument might keep going until around 2030 or so.

When the power runs out and the probes are lifeless, Krimigis says both of these legendary space probes will basically become "space junk."

"It pains me to say that," he says. While Krimigis has participated in space missions to every planet, he says the Voyager program has a special place in his heart.

Spilker points out that each spacecraft will keep moving outward, carrying its copy of a golden record that has recorded greetings in many languages, along with the sounds of Earth.

"The science mission will end. But a part of Voyager and a part of us will continue on in the space between the stars," says Spilker, noting that the golden records "may even outlast humanity as we know it."

Krimigis, though, doubts that any alien will ever stumble across a Voyager probe and have a listen.

"Space is empty," he says, "and the probability of Voyager ever running into a planet is probably slim to none."

It will take about 40,000 years for Voyager 1 to approach another star; it will come within 1.7 light years of what NASA calls "an obscure star in the constellation Ursa Minor" — also known as the Little Dipper.

Knowing that the Voyager probes are running out of time, scientists have been drawing up plans for a new mission that, if funded and launched by NASA, would send another probe even farther out into the space between stars.

"If it happens, it would launch in the 2030s," says Ocker, "and it would reach twice as far as Voyager 1 in just 50 years."

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So in 2015 they where looking for a programmer to replace the original 80 year old guy.
Think they got a diversity hire to take his place? They have been sending software patches to both of the probes all along to slim down their power requirements as time goes on.
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Here is a little better story. It's stuck just sending back a repeating pattern of 1's and 0's rather then its normal binary data stream.
 
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i know it wont happen but it would be very funny if one day voyager 1 somehow ends up crashing back onto earth but for some reason the record is now silver and the recordings are just various slurs from the future.

but in all seriousness i am surprised its even functioning still. its a shame they cant take any high quality pictures with it seeing as its pretty unlikely anybody would ever see that far out from such a close view.
 
So in 2015 they where looking for a programmer to replace the original 80 year old guy.
Think they got a diversity hire to take his place? They have been sending software patches to both of the probes all along to slim down their power requirements as time goes on.
FORTRAN will always be relevant because it's what supercomputers operate on today. The competency crisis isn't limited to just the complex systems: you'd be devestated to know modern compsci grads don't know how transistors work and why it's relevant to gate logic, can't understand floating points and negative number math; God forbid you even try to get them to work with a visual language like Ladder which is based on electromechanical relays. That's baby shit that runs everything like driers, dishwashers, stoplights, garage openers, assembly lines, etc. and their eyes glaze over because they code in a bubble without knowing how shit even works. Silicone Valley doesn't even know its own history.
 
FORTRAN will always be relevant because it's what supercomputers operate on today. The competency crisis isn't limited to just the complex systems: you'd be devestated to know modern compsci grads don't know how transistors work and why it's relevant to gate logic, can't understand floating points and negative number math; God forbid you even try to get them to work with a visual language like Ladder which is based on electromechanical relays. That's baby shit that runs everything like driers, dishwashers, stoplights, garage openers, assembly lines, etc. and their eyes glaze over because they code in a bubble without knowing how shit even works. Silicone Valley doesn't even know its own history.
ADA, JCL, and Fortran are the 'First in, Last Out' of IT. Things are moving faster now so you probably don't want to be last in. OS/2 latest, blah, just figure it out yourselves on this.
 
That's because its signal is getting weaker and weaker the further away from the Sun it gets. Simple as that. It's entered new territory that it's no wonder it's getting garbled because we never intended anything to survive long enough that far away.
Exactly what I was thinking, the thing is either out or getting ready to leave the Oort Cloud and is getting ready to turn 50 years old in a few years. Distance, interference, and just some casual wear and tear is going to degrade the signal and/or put noise in the signal, so what you do get is not going to be as coherent as it used to be, even if what it sends is still 100% authentic. I mean, this isn't a new concept, signals of all types eventually die out and need to be refreshed; this should obviously apply to something that's been sailing through space for damn near 50 fucking years.

That's baby shit that runs everything like driers, dishwashers, stoplights, garage openers, assembly lines, etc. and their eyes glaze over because they code in a bubble without knowing how shit even works. Silicone Valley doesn't even know its own history.
My insane conspiracy side claims that Google (and other assorted bodies) purposely manufactured this competency crisis by pushing Python and Go; while neglecting damn near everything that current shit is still sitting on. When I send out my resume or get a call from a recruiter; after formalities, one of the things they ask about is how long am I planning to stay in the job field, because I list AS400 Administration; and the ones who know, think they're calling some geriatric who might be ready to retire or have a heart attack and die at his desk. No man, that shit's still being used in random environments and I just happened to find myself in one and had to fucking learn it.
 
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It was the 70’s, it was a different time.

Actually, it’s a little known fact that Niggers(Nigs) were a commonly used scientific unit for measuring noise levels before adopting decibels(dB). For example, a running lawnmower would be about .3 Nigs, while the Titan rocket that launched Voyager would’ve been ~20 Niggers.
Nigger women were used as a unit of weight for a time. The average adult male weighs about 0.01 nigger women.
 
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