- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmit.online
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmit.online
P̷̯̎R̷͕̍Ạ̷̈́I̸͈͗S̵̚͜Ė̶̥ ̴̻̋T̵͘͜H̸̻̒Ě̷̠ ̴̞͊Ỏ̴͕M̵̭̓N̵̝̆I̵̮͛S̴̥̓S̶̪̄Í̴̗Ä̴̟H̸͇͛.̴̘͠ ̸̪͌
Reading how they accomplished this, I will not accept any explanation other than The Machine Spirit deciding their prayers were enough to save V1 from Chaos.
“Be sure to drink your Ovaltine”
I wonder, they have to have simulated Voyagers that they test this on?
There’s an identical voyager here on earth built same as the launched one that they use for that purpose. They may also have simulations now, but doubtful hardware was capable enough when voyager 1 launched in 1977. This is three years before Tim Paterson and 86-DOS 0.10, and ten years before MS-DOS 3.31. Joe Biden was 35 and in his first term as Senator.
You could end nearly any historical description with the sentence, “Joe Biden was 35 and in his first term as Senator.”
Not to be that guy, but there was in fact only one year that Joe Biden was 35
Not to be that guy, but there were in fact 2 years in which Joe Biden was 35 unless he was born on January first, which he was not.
The cumulative time that Joe Biden was 35 was only a year long
Meanwhile at Xerox:
Unfortunately this is no longer true. Matsumoto’s paper, “Voyager Interstellar Mission: Challenges of Flying a Very Old Spacecraft on a Very Long Mission” notes that the full suite of system simulators were not retained beyond the prime mission due to reliability problems, loss of expertise, and a move. This makes the team’s recent achievements even more impressive.
hey sorry, just needed some “me” time. wasn’t mad at you fam. anyway, back on my bullshit.
With our currently more advanced technology, could we built another Voyager project but with much higher speed that can catch up to Voyager 1 and surpass it? Or perhaps capture Voyager 1 and pushing it along?
The propulsion technology in itself hasn’t changed much, so it is not like you put a new engine and suddenly it is 3x faster. The problem is not technology, it is money. almost all the speed comes from gravity assists (get close to a moon/planet and let it accelerate you as you get closer), so to squeeze extra, you need to pass closer to more planets, which requires more fuel for the adjustments. More fuel means the probe is heavier, harder to build, etc. Maybe miniaturization of other parts makes up for that extra weight, but still, to catch up with Voyager would take decades