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by yashg
633 days ago
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A radio signal takes more than 22 hours to reach Voyager 1. And it would take the same to get a response back. Incredible. And imagine the patience needed to send commands and wait for the outcome on the part of the engineering team. You can't afford to send a wrong command and have the luxury of undo. Also, I wonder how many generations of engineers must have worked on the project by now. |
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You also have a command processor on the spacecraft side. It will have some of these characterizations present as limits on command authority. Commands sent without override that exceed these limits will be ignored, possibly cancelling the entire sequence of dependent commands. You can demand that these limits be ignored but this obviously requires you to specify it redundantly in the message set.
Should anything happen your flight software is generally going to go into a recovery mode. Voyager will try this 4 times after a period of no commands triggers a watchdog. This will switch on different radios while keeping them oriented towards the Earth in a constant effort to reacquire the command signals.
Should this process fail a backup flight software mode will then activate which performs basic mission functions on a continuous loop so whatever continues to operate on the spacecraft will transmit it's data automatically back to the Earth at it's highest power setting.
Voyager was a continuation of some of the Viking hardware and flight systems.