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Seven Billion Miles and Counting....
May 3, 2001 -- On April 28th, a Deep Space Network antenna in Madrid detected a curious radio transmission from the constellation Taurus. The feeble signal registered little more than a billionth of a trillionth of a watt -- nonetheless, it had a powerful effect on scientists.
The signal was intelligent and it came from an interstellar spacecraft about twice as far from the Sun as Pluto. It was Pioneer 10!
Ground controllers had been listening for the distant space probe since last August with no success, raising fears that its radio transmitter had finally run out of power after 29 years in space. But, says delighted Pioneer 10 project manager Larry Lasher at NASA/Ames, "Pioneer 10 lives on!"
Pioneer 10 was launched on March 2, 1972, from Cape Kennedy aboard an Atlas Centaur rocket. At the time it was the fastest spacecraft ever to leave Earth. It was the first spacecraft to travel through the asteroid belt, the first to visit Jupiter, and the first to use a planet's gravity to change course and reach solar-system escape velocity. Now, as it races for interstellar space, Pioneer 10 faces its toughest challenge yet: the inexorable march of time.
"We're way beyond our warranty," says Lasher. "Pioneer 10 was only intended to last 21 months, but it's been going for nearly 30 years." The craft is powered by electricity derived from the warmth of decaying plutonium 238. Although the half-life of the isotope is 92 years, the thermocouples that convert heat energy to electricity are degrading faster. Mission controllers suspect there won't be enough electricity to power the radio transmitter much longer.
Scientists are monitoring Pioneer's faint signals as a test of communications technology for future interstellar missions. "The Advanced Concepts Program is funding this effort," he continued. "They're learning how to extract coherent data from a noisy signal using chaos theory."
Far-flung Pioneer 10 is the perfect guinea pig for such an experiment. Its feeble signals travel nearly 11 hours to reach Earth from a distance of 7.3 billion miles -- that's 78 times farther from the Sun than our planet.
On December 8, 1992, when Pioneer 10 was "only" 5.2 billion miles away, the craft experienced an unexpected course change. Astronomers think it was diverted slightly by the gravitational pull of a Kuiper Belt Object. Circling the Sun at vast distances beyond the outermost planets, Kuiper Belt Objects are asteroid-sized bodies similar in composition to icy Pluto.
The unusual encounter happened as Pioneer 10 was exiting the realm of the planets and exploring for the first time the outer limits of the heliosphere -- a giant bubble carved out of the gaseous interstellar medium by the solar wind. No one knows the exact dimensions of the heliosphere, but Pioneer 10 is probably approaching its edge. "We could cross into interstellar space within a few years," says Lasher. "We'll know we're there when the flux of cosmic rays recorded by the onboard Geiger Tube Telescope suddenly increases." (Prof. James van Allen, principal investigator for the Geiger Tube Telescope, still analyses Pioneer 10's cosmic ray data even though van Allen himself has retired from the University of Iowa.)
Hopefully Pioneer's radio will still be transmitting when the historic crossing occurs. It could happen, says Lasher. After all, Pioneer 10 has beaten the odds before.
For instance, Pioneer 10 was the first spacecraft to cross the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Before that crossing, no one knew how many rocks and grains of sand speeding through space at thousands of miles per hour would hit and possibly disable the spacecraft. Pioneer 10 made the journey nearly unscathed, thus opening the way for other probes to explore beyond Mars.
Later, the craft endured an intense shower of radiation inside Jupiter's magnetosphere -- and kept right on going!
After Pioneer's power runs out, the 570 lb spacecraft will have a new job: ambassador to the stars. The probe will have its first stellar encounter in about 300,000 years when it passes within three light years of the red dwarf Ross 248 in the constellation Taurus. Ross 248 is an 11th magnitude star 10.3 light years from Earth. In the next million years, Pioneer 10 will pass ten stars at distances ranging from three to nine light years, and will probably still be traveling through the Milky Way galaxy when the Sun becomes a red giant and destroys our planet five billion years hence.
The probe wasn't so long-lasting in its first and only movie role, Star Trek V: the Final Frontier. A trigger-happy Klingon named Captain Klaa blasted Pioneer 10 to smithereens for target practice. Of course that was just a model of the spacecraft.
TRW, the company that designed and built Pioneer 10 under contract with NASA Ames, provided Paramount Pictures drawings for the Star Trek model. Says Paul Morgan, a video producer for TRW's IMAGE Center, "The computer model was a good one, but a cameraman complained that it was hard to light."
The Klingon hit it anyway.
Pioneer 10 bears a message for any life forms that it might encounter on its trek across the galaxy. A gold-anodized aluminum plaque (pictured above) was designed by Frank Drake and the late Carl Sagan and bolted to the spacecraft before it blasted off in 1972. The plaque's engraving depicts a man and a woman, a map of Earth's solar system, and other symbols that may help intelligent beings interpret the message and understand something about the spacecraft's creators.
As an emissary to the galaxy, Pioneer 10's greatest and most bizarre adventures may still lie ahead.
(link with great illustrations: http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast03may_1.htm )
And then, in 2003:
When the interplanetary probe Pioneer 10 left Earth on March 2, 1972, it was indeed off on a pioneering mission. In fact, the spacecraft led the way to all exploration of deep space.
Pioneer 10 was the first probe to travel through the Asteroid Belt and the first craft to explore Jupiter. On June 13, 1983, it became the first space probe ever to travel further than the Sun's most distant planet.
The Asteroid Belt is a Sun-orbiting span of rocky debris floating in space between Mars and Jupiter. The most distant of the nine known major planets, at the far edge of the Solar System, are Neptune and Pluto.
Since passing the outer planets, despite dwindling power onboard, Pioneer 10 has been sending back information by radio as it heads into interstellar space. Eventually it will fly into the so-called heliopause, that part of space where the Sun's influence ends and true interstellar space begins. No spacecraft from Earth has reached there yet.
Nothing heard. Unfortunately, a signal from Pioneer 10 was not received back home on Earth by NASA's Deep Space Network (DSN) during the last contact attempt February 7, 2003.
After more than 30 years, the venerable Pioneer 10 spacecraft may have sent its last signal to Earth. The last time Pioneer's very weak signal had been received by DSN was on January 22, 2003.
NASA engineers reported that Pioneer 10's radioisotope power source had decayed, and the distant spacecraft now might not have enough power to send transmissions all the way home to Earth.
The previous three contacts, including the January 22 signal, had been very faint with no telemetry received. The last time a Pioneer 10 contact returned telemetry data was April 27, 2002. Now, NASA has no additional contact attempts planned for Pioneer 10.
AND IN THE OTHER DIRECTION, VOYAGER
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/voyager_heliosphere.html
Humans can do some astonishing things, sometimes.
Seven Billion Miles and Counting....
May 3, 2001 -- On April 28th, a Deep Space Network antenna in Madrid detected a curious radio transmission from the constellation Taurus. The feeble signal registered little more than a billionth of a trillionth of a watt -- nonetheless, it had a powerful effect on scientists.
The signal was intelligent and it came from an interstellar spacecraft about twice as far from the Sun as Pluto. It was Pioneer 10!
Ground controllers had been listening for the distant space probe since last August with no success, raising fears that its radio transmitter had finally run out of power after 29 years in space. But, says delighted Pioneer 10 project manager Larry Lasher at NASA/Ames, "Pioneer 10 lives on!"
Pioneer 10 was launched on March 2, 1972, from Cape Kennedy aboard an Atlas Centaur rocket. At the time it was the fastest spacecraft ever to leave Earth. It was the first spacecraft to travel through the asteroid belt, the first to visit Jupiter, and the first to use a planet's gravity to change course and reach solar-system escape velocity. Now, as it races for interstellar space, Pioneer 10 faces its toughest challenge yet: the inexorable march of time.
"We're way beyond our warranty," says Lasher. "Pioneer 10 was only intended to last 21 months, but it's been going for nearly 30 years." The craft is powered by electricity derived from the warmth of decaying plutonium 238. Although the half-life of the isotope is 92 years, the thermocouples that convert heat energy to electricity are degrading faster. Mission controllers suspect there won't be enough electricity to power the radio transmitter much longer.
Scientists are monitoring Pioneer's faint signals as a test of communications technology for future interstellar missions. "The Advanced Concepts Program is funding this effort," he continued. "They're learning how to extract coherent data from a noisy signal using chaos theory."
Far-flung Pioneer 10 is the perfect guinea pig for such an experiment. Its feeble signals travel nearly 11 hours to reach Earth from a distance of 7.3 billion miles -- that's 78 times farther from the Sun than our planet.
On December 8, 1992, when Pioneer 10 was "only" 5.2 billion miles away, the craft experienced an unexpected course change. Astronomers think it was diverted slightly by the gravitational pull of a Kuiper Belt Object. Circling the Sun at vast distances beyond the outermost planets, Kuiper Belt Objects are asteroid-sized bodies similar in composition to icy Pluto.
The unusual encounter happened as Pioneer 10 was exiting the realm of the planets and exploring for the first time the outer limits of the heliosphere -- a giant bubble carved out of the gaseous interstellar medium by the solar wind. No one knows the exact dimensions of the heliosphere, but Pioneer 10 is probably approaching its edge. "We could cross into interstellar space within a few years," says Lasher. "We'll know we're there when the flux of cosmic rays recorded by the onboard Geiger Tube Telescope suddenly increases." (Prof. James van Allen, principal investigator for the Geiger Tube Telescope, still analyses Pioneer 10's cosmic ray data even though van Allen himself has retired from the University of Iowa.)
Hopefully Pioneer's radio will still be transmitting when the historic crossing occurs. It could happen, says Lasher. After all, Pioneer 10 has beaten the odds before.
For instance, Pioneer 10 was the first spacecraft to cross the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Before that crossing, no one knew how many rocks and grains of sand speeding through space at thousands of miles per hour would hit and possibly disable the spacecraft. Pioneer 10 made the journey nearly unscathed, thus opening the way for other probes to explore beyond Mars.
Later, the craft endured an intense shower of radiation inside Jupiter's magnetosphere -- and kept right on going!
After Pioneer's power runs out, the 570 lb spacecraft will have a new job: ambassador to the stars. The probe will have its first stellar encounter in about 300,000 years when it passes within three light years of the red dwarf Ross 248 in the constellation Taurus. Ross 248 is an 11th magnitude star 10.3 light years from Earth. In the next million years, Pioneer 10 will pass ten stars at distances ranging from three to nine light years, and will probably still be traveling through the Milky Way galaxy when the Sun becomes a red giant and destroys our planet five billion years hence.
The probe wasn't so long-lasting in its first and only movie role, Star Trek V: the Final Frontier. A trigger-happy Klingon named Captain Klaa blasted Pioneer 10 to smithereens for target practice. Of course that was just a model of the spacecraft.
TRW, the company that designed and built Pioneer 10 under contract with NASA Ames, provided Paramount Pictures drawings for the Star Trek model. Says Paul Morgan, a video producer for TRW's IMAGE Center, "The computer model was a good one, but a cameraman complained that it was hard to light."
The Klingon hit it anyway.
Pioneer 10 bears a message for any life forms that it might encounter on its trek across the galaxy. A gold-anodized aluminum plaque (pictured above) was designed by Frank Drake and the late Carl Sagan and bolted to the spacecraft before it blasted off in 1972. The plaque's engraving depicts a man and a woman, a map of Earth's solar system, and other symbols that may help intelligent beings interpret the message and understand something about the spacecraft's creators.
As an emissary to the galaxy, Pioneer 10's greatest and most bizarre adventures may still lie ahead.
(link with great illustrations: http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast03may_1.htm )
And then, in 2003:
When the interplanetary probe Pioneer 10 left Earth on March 2, 1972, it was indeed off on a pioneering mission. In fact, the spacecraft led the way to all exploration of deep space.
Pioneer 10 was the first probe to travel through the Asteroid Belt and the first craft to explore Jupiter. On June 13, 1983, it became the first space probe ever to travel further than the Sun's most distant planet.
The Asteroid Belt is a Sun-orbiting span of rocky debris floating in space between Mars and Jupiter. The most distant of the nine known major planets, at the far edge of the Solar System, are Neptune and Pluto.
Since passing the outer planets, despite dwindling power onboard, Pioneer 10 has been sending back information by radio as it heads into interstellar space. Eventually it will fly into the so-called heliopause, that part of space where the Sun's influence ends and true interstellar space begins. No spacecraft from Earth has reached there yet.
Nothing heard. Unfortunately, a signal from Pioneer 10 was not received back home on Earth by NASA's Deep Space Network (DSN) during the last contact attempt February 7, 2003.
After more than 30 years, the venerable Pioneer 10 spacecraft may have sent its last signal to Earth. The last time Pioneer's very weak signal had been received by DSN was on January 22, 2003.
NASA engineers reported that Pioneer 10's radioisotope power source had decayed, and the distant spacecraft now might not have enough power to send transmissions all the way home to Earth.
The previous three contacts, including the January 22 signal, had been very faint with no telemetry received. The last time a Pioneer 10 contact returned telemetry data was April 27, 2002. Now, NASA has no additional contact attempts planned for Pioneer 10.
AND IN THE OTHER DIRECTION, VOYAGER
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/voyager_heliosphere.html
Humans can do some astonishing things, sometimes.