Engineers shut down one science instrument on Voyager-2 to conserve power
In order to keep the spacecraft functioning as its nuclear power source dwindles, engineers have now shut down one of Voyager-2’s operating science instruments in order to keep four instruments operating.
Mission engineers at NASA have turned off the plasma science instrument aboard the Voyager 2 spacecraft due to the probe’s gradually shrinking electrical power supply.
Traveling more than 12.8 billion miles (20.5 billion kilometers) from Earth, the spacecraft continues to use four science instruments to study the region outside our heliosphere, the protective bubble of particles and magnetic fields created by the Sun. The probe has enough power to continue exploring this region with at least one operational science instrument into the 2030s. [emphasis mine]
The highlighted sentence is the first time I have ever seen any prediction for the life of Voyager-2 to extend past 2030. Previously, project engineers have consistently stated that the power would run down sometime around 2026. This extension suggests the decision has been made to do whatever can be done to keep the spacecraft functioning for as long as possible, not so much to do science but to test the limits of its engineering. To do so, they will step-by-step shut down instruments rather than keep them all going.
In order to keep the spacecraft functioning as its nuclear power source dwindles, engineers have now shut down one of Voyager-2’s operating science instruments in order to keep four instruments operating.
Mission engineers at NASA have turned off the plasma science instrument aboard the Voyager 2 spacecraft due to the probe’s gradually shrinking electrical power supply.
Traveling more than 12.8 billion miles (20.5 billion kilometers) from Earth, the spacecraft continues to use four science instruments to study the region outside our heliosphere, the protective bubble of particles and magnetic fields created by the Sun. The probe has enough power to continue exploring this region with at least one operational science instrument into the 2030s. [emphasis mine]
The highlighted sentence is the first time I have ever seen any prediction for the life of Voyager-2 to extend past 2030. Previously, project engineers have consistently stated that the power would run down sometime around 2026. This extension suggests the decision has been made to do whatever can be done to keep the spacecraft functioning for as long as possible, not so much to do science but to test the limits of its engineering. To do so, they will step-by-step shut down instruments rather than keep them all going.