Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
NASA Space News Science Technology

NASA's Voyager 2 Flew By Saturn 35 Years Ago Today (space.com) 61

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Space.com: Thirty-five years ago today, a NASA spacecraft got an up-close look at beautiful, enigmatic Saturn. On Aug. 25, 1981, the Voyager 2 probe zoomed within 26,000 miles (41,000 kilometers) of the ringed planet's cloud tops. The discoveries made by Voyager 2 -- and by its twin, Voyager 1, which had flown past Saturn nine months earlier -- reshaped scientists' understanding of the Saturn system and planted the seed for NASA's Cassini mission, which began orbiting the ringed planet in 2004, NASA officials said. Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 launched a few weeks apart in 1977, tasked with performing a "grand tour" of the solar system's big planets -- Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. The two spacecraft accomplished that goal, eyeing all four gaseous worlds up close, and also studying 48 of their moons. (Voyager 1 flew past Jupiter and Saturn, while Voyager 2 had close encounters with all four planets.) The Voyagers weren't the first spacecraft to fly by Saturn; that distinction belongs to NASA's Pioneer 11 probe, which did so in 1979. But the Voyagers broke a lot of new ground; they discovered four new Saturn moons, for example, and revealed an incredible diversity of landscapes on satellites such as Dione, Tethys and Iapetus, NASA officials said. August 25th appears to be a good day for nerds. You can view some out-of-this-world photos from NASA's Voyager 1 and 2 probes here.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

NASA's Voyager 2 Flew By Saturn 35 Years Ago Today

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Not as newsworthy as Voyager 1's interstellar data, but Voyager 2 is also heading out of the solar system on it's "Interstellar Mission", it is expected to be able to provide measurements of interstellar plasma density & temperature once it's out there.

  • Relativeness (Score:5, Informative)

    by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Friday August 26, 2016 @02:24AM (#52773571)
    After all these years, Voyager 2 is only 15 light-hours from Earth (Voyager 1 is 18 lh). Even if the newest probes may go somewhat faster, reaching the closest star (4.2 light-years) is a long way to go.
  • These were amazing missions that provided a TON of data and knowledge for the price.

    With modern tech, do the same missions, same planets, new info!

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Friday August 26, 2016 @02:50AM (#52773607)

      With modern tech, do the same missions, same planets, new info!

      Voyager took advantage of an alignment of the planets that only occurs once every 175 years or so. A similar mission won't happen for a long time. Meanwhile, New Horizons [wikipedia.org] just buzzed Pluto, and is now heading into the Kuiper Belt.

      • by necro81 ( 917438 )

        Meanwhile, New Horizons just buzzed Pluto, and is now heading into the Kuiper Belt.

        What is more, New Horizons did a flyby of Jupiter [wikipedia.org] on its way to the outer solar system - quite similar to Voyager. However, this was not in the prime science mission, so they didn't gather all the data they could, it was really more a system test to make sure that they could take useful data.

      • For an idea of how much that alignment helped, here's the crazy path Pioneer 11 took [honeysucklecreek.net] from Jupiter to Saturn without the benefit of alignment. Instead of flying from Jupiter's orbit to Saturn's orbit, it had to fly almost to the opposite side of the solar system to intercept Saturn. Nearly 5 years, compared to approx 2 years for Voyagers 1/2.

        Original paper describing the travel benefits of the alignment [gravityassist.com].
    • NASA stuff has been morphed by Congress into a source of pork. The folks in Congress hem and haw about which states get to build components. It's like a horse and donkey trading show, "OK, so my state will build the engines, your state will build the avionics, and your state will sell the television rights".

      Just give NASA the money, and let them decide who is best to deliver.

      • by sjbe ( 173966 )

        Just give NASA the money, and let them decide who is best to deliver.

        As much as I like and respect the folks at NASA, I wouldn't hand ANY government agency a blank check or leave them to do whatever they want with the money. Money corrupts and the good folks at NASA aren't immune. I trust NASA more than most but not that much. That said you do have a valid point that Congress is getting in the way too much. How to solve this I'm not sure. I do think increasing NASA funding and keeping them focused on science, exploration and advanced technology research would be hugely

        • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 )

          That said you do have a valid point that Congress is getting in the way too much. How to solve this I'm not sure.

          Limit them to a single term in a specific office. But, we can start by removing party affiliation from the ballot. That alone will probably lead to more churn than any other single change other than hard term limits. It would certainly change the face of politics in the US.

          • Limit them to a single term in a specific office.

            A nice idea but then you end up with a bunch of people in office that don't even know where the restroom is much less how to get anything done. If someone is doing a good job I'm fine with them serving more than one term. However I don't think they need to serve more than 4 terms in the House, 2 terms as president or two terms as Senator. Churn just for the sake of churn is pointless. But I don't think we need people serving in congress for multiple decades either.

            But, we can start by removing party affiliation from the ballot.

            Will never ever happen. Waste of time

      • NASA has ALWAYS been about the pork and the distribution of federal funds.

        Check out the history of the early years (e.g., https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/sql01). For example, why would you build a space center in Texas? Because the VP and a high-ranking member of Congress's budget committee were from Texas, of course.

        "On September 19, 1961, Administrator James E. Webb of NASA formally announced that the new Manned Spacecraft Center would be built in southeastern Harris County, Texas, about
    • by hackertourist ( 2202674 ) on Friday August 26, 2016 @06:26AM (#52773953)

      A flyby is acceptable for a first mission. The science data from Voyager answered some questions, but also raised lots of new questions. To answer these, we went for orbiting missions that would spend far longer at the planet, using better instruments, and new instruments inspired by the Voyager science return.

      Flybys have big drawbacks: you only get a few hours of observation time, so you can't study patterns that occur over long periods (seasonal changes, for example). You can't even see the entire surface of the planet (unless you get lucky and the planet rotates really quickly).

      For Jupiter and Saturn, we've had several orbiters now (e.g. Galileo, Ulysses, Cassini, Juno) and we've amassed far more knowledge than flybys could ever give us.

      Uranus and Neptune haven't had dedicated missions yet, but that might change soon.

      Voyager 3 and 4 were planned initially, by the way (identical to Voyager 1 and 2, with mission plans that included Pluto). They fell to budget cuts (early '70s, NASA was elbow-deep in expensive Apollo missions).

    • by plopez ( 54068 )

      Budget cuts.

      • Budget cuts.

        We seem to have the money for more tanks and aircraft carriers...

        Voyager was cheap! Build one less Aircraft Carrier and double NASA's budget!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    but 35 years!?

    • but 35 years!?

      It has something to do with Einstein's relativity. Slashdot is moving faster than the speed of light. Or maybe the rest of the world is moving faster than the speed of light. At any rate 35 years comes out of the equation.

      I think.

      Maybe.

    • Thirty five years and a day.
  • As usual, "today" means "yesterday" on Slashdot. And without "today" meaning "today" this story is pretty much worthless (we all knew about the fly-by).

    Better yet would have been to give us a "tomorrow" or "day after next" story, so we could have planned our fly-by parties.

    Oh I wish I were a Slashdot editor. I could still live the life of a slacker, but get paid for it.

  • I can understand celebrations at 25 years and 50 etc
    or 32 for binary freaks

    • For a guy who recently turned 40...it kind of is. I was just old enough to remember this news and it spurred a five-year obsession with astronomy and rocketry.
    • The Voyagers are among the best space achievements, so anytime is a good time to remind us NASA did very good. Maybe not 32 since there is not enough binary freaks, but a multiple of 5 sounds good, like the wedding anniversaries.
    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      celebrations at 25 years

      This is just Slashdot being 10 years late.

  • V'ger is pleased with the Creator and would like them to run more missions to the larger planets.

    • by Agripa ( 139780 )

      V'ger is pleased with the Creator and would like them to run more missions to the larger planets.

      A carbon unit infestation in interfering with the Creator. Send a probe to the Creator's home planet to render aid.

  • The on board clocks very accurately calculate that it has been flying for only 34.8 [*] years. How could it have flown past Jupitor 35 years ago?

    [*] I am using the formula dleta_t=(sqrt(1 - (v/c)^2) + poetic_license(liberal_dose)).

If it wasn't for Newton, we wouldn't have to eat bruised apples.

Working...