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No, we REALLY REALLY mean it this time, Voyager 1 has Left The Solar System. Really! - Printable Version +- MacResource (https://forums.macresource.com) +-- Forum: My Category (https://forums.macresource.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: Tips and Deals (https://forums.macresource.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Thread: No, we REALLY REALLY mean it this time, Voyager 1 has Left The Solar System. Really! (/showthread.php?tid=156472) Pages:
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No, we REALLY REALLY mean it this time, Voyager 1 has Left The Solar System. Really! - Paul F. - 08-17-2013 http://news.yahoo.com/voyager-left-solar-system-last-research-shows-002814589.html Really, no foolin' this time... Scientists have been waiting for Voyager to detect a magnetic field that flows in a different direction than the solar system's magnetic field. But the new research shows that scenario is not accurate. Re: No, we REALLY REALLY mean it this time, Voyager 1 has Left The Solar System. Really! - pRICE cUBE - 08-17-2013 Is this the one that returns as V'Ger? Re: No, we REALLY REALLY mean it this time, Voyager 1 has Left The Solar System. Really! - space-time - 08-17-2013 I won't believe it until it returns to Earth with concrete evidence. seriously, I wonder how much longer we will be able to communicate with this craft. Will it run out of energy first, or it will be too far to make communication possible? Re: No, we REALLY REALLY mean it this time, Voyager 1 has Left The Solar System. Really! - SteveG - 08-17-2013 hmmph...and not even a post card Re: No, we REALLY REALLY mean it this time, Voyager 1 has Left The Solar System. Really! - Zoidberg - 08-17-2013 pRICE cUBE wrote: No, that was Voyager 6. And I knew that before I looked at the Wiki. < /nerd > http://en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/V'Ger Re: No, we REALLY REALLY mean it this time, Voyager 1 has Left The Solar System. Really! - Paul F. - 08-17-2013 space-time wrote: Voyager 1's Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator will be generating less than required to keep the spacecraft communicating sometime in 2019 or 2020. Around 2035, it'll "go dark" completely as the power level falls below what the control computer can use. Re: No, we REALLY REALLY mean it this time, Voyager 1 has Left The Solar System. Really! - blooz - 08-17-2013 Pictures or it didn't happen. Re: No, we REALLY REALLY mean it this time, Voyager 1 has Left The Solar System. Really! - freeradical - 08-17-2013 Is it past Pluto? ;-) Re: No, we REALLY REALLY mean it this time, Voyager 1 has Left The Solar System. Really! - GGD - 08-17-2013 Not everyone is convinced, however. Not sure who gets to make the final determination. But I'm sure Voyager will be glad when it happens, to shut up those kids in the back seat that keep asking "Are we there yet?". Re: No, we REALLY REALLY mean it this time, Voyager 1 has Left The Solar System. Really! - Racer X - 08-17-2013 Paul F. wrote: Voyager 1's Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator will be generating less than required to keep the spacecraft communicating sometime in 2019 or 2020. Around 2035, it'll "go dark" completely as the power level falls below what the control computer can use. Oh, come on Paul, call it a RTG. A lot of stuff launched uses RTGs. They just don't tell most of us. |