In article ,
"Michael Lawson" wrote:
"Max Power" wrote in message
...
Voyager probes in funding crisis
Nasa's twin Voyager probes may have to close down in October to save
money,
the US space agency has said.
Launched in 1977, Voyagers One and Two are now more than 14 billion
and 11
billion km from Earth, respectively.
They are on their final mission to locate the boundary between the
Sun's
domain and interstellar space.
But the agency's Earth-Sun System division has had to cut its budget
for
next year from $74m to $53m, meaning that some projects will be
abandoned.
Although the Voyager probes are thought to have another 15 years of
life
left in them, they are very expensive to run, costing Nasa about
$4.2m a
year for operations and data analysis.
Other missions like Ulysses, which was launched in 1990 to explore
the Sun's
polar regions, might also have to be abandoned after the end of the
fiscal
year in October.
Although the decision is not yet final, some Nasa scientists are
preparing
themselves for the worst. Voyager project scientist Edward Stone of
the
California Institute of Technology told Nature magazine: "We are
currently
developing a plan for shutdown."
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/h...re/4338245.stm
That's not 4.2 mil for the probes themselves, but to perform
monitoring and data analysis. The probes will continue
to transmit until their power is exhausted; it's a matter of
someone listening, examining the data, and storing it. That
is what would be shutdown. No one is going to fly out
to beyond the solar system and shut down the probes or
anything.
To be honest, I'm surprised that NASA was still devoting
money towards Voyager, since they had already succeeded
in their missions.
The science is never finished.
There is a new issue of the solar system passing into a more dense
galactic cloud of dust that can have serious implications for us on
earth. I want the funding to continue the examination of the solar
heliopause.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmp...&e=8&u=/space/
20050304/sc_space/hugespacecloudsmayhavecausedmassextinctions
The Mission Objective:
http://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/interstellar.html
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Telamon
Ventura, California