NASA Contacts Pioneer 10 110
Spaceboy writes: "NASA scientists said Sunday they have contacted the Pioneer 10 spacecraft, ending fears that the robotic probe had gone silent 29 years into a mission that has carried it more than 7 billion miles from Earth. Here's the story at excite.com." NASA still maintains a Pioneer webpage, which has been updated with recent information.
Re:sign of the times (Score:1)
The sad Irony (Score:1)
Re:sign of the times (Score:1)
Re:Round Trip (Score:1)
Oh, puleeez (Was: Re:sign of the times) (Score:1)
Whether a project team is centralized or distributed, whether the code is proprietary or open, make little difference. Terabytes of crappy software has been spewing out of proprietary teams for over half a century; why should open projects be any different?
It's easy to look at the hundreds of crappy open source projects and deduce that open source software sucks in general, but they're *visible*. You don't see the bad code in proprietary software, you just swear at Bill Gates and reboot.
The open projects that really have it together are an order of magnitude better organized, managed, documented and tested than most proprietary software.
Re:Pioneer is a HPB! Boot him! (Score:1)
portscanning is not pinging -- you can do it in paralel
Re:Quantity/quality tradeoff is deliberate. (Score:1)
A guy throws 10 darts that all hit nearly the same spot about an inch from the edge of the target. That's precision.
A guy throws 10 darts that all hit in a randomly distributed area around the bullseye. That's accuracy.
A guy throws 10 darts and they all hit the exact middle of the board. Now you lost the bet.
Re: off topic crap (was:Oh, puleeez) (Score:1)
implying that they are not software companies, thus my entire argument does not apply! *ank*, thanks for playing.
Re:Pay lip service to quality then buy on price (Score:1)
What is a DC-DC converter? Why would one need to convert DC power to DC power? Stepping it to a different voltage, or something?
(Clearly, yes, I *am* almost entirely ignorant of electrical engineering, thank you.)
Old News, Pray Tell? (Score:1)
Is any fuel left? (Score:1)
not to far in the future, it would make more
sense to turn it around and bring it back to
earth orbit if they have the fuel. They should
be able to learn something about the long term
effects of exposure to space from it.
Re:Pioneer (Score:1)
Re:Round Trip (Score:1)
Re:Round Trip (Score:1)
more like
"request timed out"
Re:Old News, Pray Tell? (Score:1)
---
James Sleeman
Re:29 years old? (Score:1)
Hey, windows fixes itself.. it just needs a reboot. Problem is that it fixes itself too often, like always
Re:NASA's site /.'ed (Score:1)
Re:Pioneer (Score:1)
Born on March 2, 1972 (Score:1)
When I happen to remember Pioneer, between beers at my usual party, I do toast it, and hope that I'll live as long as that probe! :-) guess I better cut back on the beers ;-)
Re:8W is loud (Score:1)
Remember, it's 8w from a "point source" as opposed to something the size of a deep sky object.
Inspiration (Score:1)
Re:sign of the times (Score:1)
Stated differently: Free software that is distrubuted under a policy of Release Early, Release Often is generally trash.
Re:Holy Crap! (Score:1)
5W NBFM transmitter, 146MHz (amateur 2m band)
Theoric distance of over 10,000 miles (in free space).
Re:NEWSFLASH - Pioneer 10 spacecraft contacts NASA (Score:1)
All your base belong to ---===*> XO
IBM Employment (Score:1)
Re:Old tech vs new tech (Score:1)
Why would you want to? More carcasses to strip and integrate into The Project. Mine's a security bot with integrated flashbulb tazer, betamax VCR capability and Data-Over-CB networking. ;)
No wonder ET doesn't like us (Score:1)
Yeah, but what is the Loonies' brain cancer rate?
Re:Holy Crap! (Score:2)
Re:Oh, puleeez (Was: Re:sign of the times) (Score:2)
The "Release Early, Release Often" system completly sidesteps the issue of QA Testing on the final code. The day I see an OSS project with a "Download the Testplan!" link on it's homepage, is the day the Devil puts his skates on. I swear.
Re:Is any fuel left? (Score:2)
-Mars
Re:Pay lip service to quality then buy on price (Score:2)
What is a DC-DC converter? Why would one need to convert DC power to DC power? Stepping it to a different voltage, or something?
Yes, DC-DC converters are used to convert DC power to a different voltage (or polarity). One place you see them is on computer motherboards, where you have (for example) 3.3V available but you need 1.8V to power your CPU. A DC-DC converter can step the voltage down without wasting much of the power (as you would if you used a linear voltage regulator, or a resistor). DC-DC converters can also step voltages up, for example when you need to generate 300V for a camera flash from a 1.5V battery.
Re:Oh, puleeez (Was: Re:sign of the times) (Score:2)
Everyone hates testing, that's why lots of companies have dedicated QA departments. Many well-managed open projects have automated unit and regression tests, but functional testing is boring and better left to early adopters.
Users of open software are used to seeing "stable" and "unstable" releases both available, and they choose what's appropriate to their needs and level of risk tolerance.
Re:Old tech vs new tech (Score:2)
Re:29 years! (Score:2)
"HAL, copy music!"
"I'm sorry, Dave, you know I cannot copy music that the RIAA doesn't say you own."
Re: off topic crap (was:Oh, puleeez) (Score:2)
uhh, have you ever worked for a software company? Have you ever looked at their code? In all the companies I've worked in they have had coding standards. You submit code to be reviewed that isn't up to the coding standard (that means, is not clear enough, does not have sensible comment blocks, does not do what it is supposed to do, does not have the proper asserts and safety checks in it, etc) and your code gets rejected. You have to fix the shit before you submit.
Well in all companies I've worked at - Fortune 500 ones - the inhouse software *is* crap and poorly written. They do nothing like what you say above. Standards are usually left to the particular programmer, if they have any, and thus most programs have many "standards" in them.
Re:Solar wind studies (Score:2)
Re:Quantity/quality tradeoff is deliberate. (Score:2)
The premise is that on one had they can build spacecraft cheap (relatively), and have much or most of them not work. Or spend vast amounts of money checking and rechecking everything, and desining in tons of reliability, then they'd still only reach the reliability of the launch vehicle itself, so they'd still lose 1 in 20 or so.
Their studies had concluded that to get the most amount of science done for a given amount of money spent, they should expect to lose about 1 in 5 spacecraft. Pretty close to what has actually happened.
and the response was... (Score:2)
Ahhhh... forget it
Re:The Pioneer's Last Words... (Score:2)
Re:sign of the times (Score:2)
Now don't go sending any LADA's into space ya hear?
Re:What kind of sensors/tech is on this thing? (Score:2)
Re:sign of the times (Score:2)
"Slashdotters, engage in some honest self-assessment before you dispute this. Can you code, or should you maybe keep your mouth shut about this?"
I can code.
"And just how much of a typical linux distro can you defend as useful?"
For me? About 500 megs of Debian. The rest I don't install.
"Linux today is turning rapidly into what windows was four or five years ago."
Support? Any at all? How do you justify this?
"Windows, in case you haven't looked in the last four or five years (and those still claiming it crashes all the time obviously haven't), is getting better."
I am sometimes forced to use Windows for some things and it still disgusts me. It is wasteful, unstable, slow, unconfigurable, and incompatible.
sneaking into the house (Score:2)
pioneer: control, this is pioneer 10
control: young man where have you been?
pioneer: um... I was just out with some friends honest
control: young man if it weren't for your being 7 billion miles away I'd ground you.
NASA's site /.'ed (Score:2)
(It's very late - I wasn't expecting the /. effect right now...does /. have server log data pubished anywhere? I'd love to see the time summaries...)
Re:job security (Score:2)
Cheers to NASA, though. May Pioneer continue.
/Brian
Re: off topic crap (was:Oh, puleeez) (Score:2)
I worked on a project a year and a half ago (VB development -- I was slumming) where a lot of the back-end code was in Cobol (didn't have to deal with that myself) and had no coding standards to speak of. Even better, the VB code I was dealing with was cookie-cutter code based on the work of someone else who seemed to have a pathological fear of writing comments.
Didn't help me with my VB much, and it's something of a joke to say I know anything about programming the AS/400 -- I got more information on the system by playing with the generic GUI front end than I did writing the code that talked to the database directly.
/Brian
Re:sign of the times (Score:2)
Re:Solar wind studies (Score:2)
Exsqueeze me? According to the Excite article, Pioneer 10 is travelling at 27,380 miles per hour relative to the sun. According to my calculations, this is about 0.00004 c. Enough to measurably red-shift the transmission, yes, barely. Hardly "red shifted beyond belief."
Re:29 years and no crash? (Score:2)
These both have mention of it, i'm sure you can find more with a better search
http://www.cnn.com/2000/TECH/space/03/02/venera
http://www.spaceviews.com/1999/11/09c.html
Re:sign of the times (Score:2)
Re:Cool, But So What? (Score:2)
Re:29 years and no crash? (Score:3)
I.E, it only has a fixed set of tasks to run, and it can be tuned to do those tasks extremly well because of it.
And Pioneer 6? (Score:3)
scientists contacted in December to mark the 35th anniversary of
its launch."
So how far is Pioneer 6 away?
The Pioneer's Last Words... (Score:3)
Re:sign of the times (Score:3)
It costs roughly 20 times as much, has a larger support crew, wieghs a godawful amount and everything is quad redundancy. Todays probes are cheap and quick, built with off the shelf parts and aren't as redundant, but do as good or better science. So if a couple fail its not a problem from the scientific comunities point of view
And what did it say? (Score:3)
"Something big is going to happen... something wonderful!"
(ok, maybe not quite the scene from 2001, but what the heck...)
--
Re: off topic crap (was:Oh, puleeez) (Score:3)
uhh, have you ever worked for a software company? Have you ever looked at their code? In all the companies I've worked in they have had coding standards. You submit code to be reviewed that isn't up to the coding standard (that means, is not clear enough, does not have sensible comment blocks, does not do what it is supposed to do, does not have the proper asserts and safety checks in it, etc) and your code gets rejected. You have to fix the shit before you submit. Maybe this isn't so of the little dot commy startups that dont have a single senior programmer, but most companies who actually make money off their software have a level of quality that is way beyond the junk you find on source forge or even in the linux kernel. You wont find comments like
On the other hand, perhaps open source has something to offer, even if it is just a cheap way to exploit programmers.
Re:Quantity/quality tradeoff is deliberate. (Score:3)
Amen. The way I had it explained to me was to imagine the world's most efficient WW2 bomber pilot given a mission: to make one flight with 16 bombs and blow up a all the ball bearing factories along the Rhine.
He got himself over the first target, aimed, and let fly with one bomb ('cuz he was so good that he doesn't need to carpet-bomb the whole city). The bomb hit the target he aimed at - a civilian's house ten blocks away from the ball bearing factory. He flew onward, aiming at a house 5 blocks away from the power plant, and drops another one, blowing the house to smithereens. He continued until he ran out of bombs, having hit every target he aimed at. 15 houses, and one cow standing in a field, just for a lark.
One bomb, one kill.
100% efficiency -- and totally ineffective.
Re:Quantity/quality tradeoff is deliberate. (Score:3)
Re: off topic crap (was:Oh, puleeez) (Score:3)
1: Practical. Updates and upgrades actually help. They fix bugs and improve performance. OSS projects start out worse than CSS ones, and then they get better.
2: Emotional. No legal threats in the software license. I don't like threats.
3: Ethical. It's free (as in beer) quite often. CSS is also sometimes free as in beer, but it's very rarely if ever free as in speech. I like being free, and I like supporting people who want me to be free.
4: Customizable. You can take apart an OSS program and change it in any way you want. I like control of my computer. I don't like giving corporations control of my computer.
"On the other hand, perhaps open source has something to offer, even if it is just a cheap way to exploit programmers."
Troll.
29 years and no crash? (Score:3)
I still get the feeling that nasa shouldn't be that far ahead of us in technology to have planed such a clean launch and trajectory when chaos theory says a dust spec could drastically modify the path in the long run.
Dust, gravity and heat could affect Pioneer's path. Compound that trajectory deviation 29 years and it should land millions of miles away from its destination ( Unless space is mostly void and gravity less) Granted, the craft has no specific destination but I'd think something would have crossed its path by now.
Re:Not Applicable (Score:3)
/Brian
Cool, But So What? (Score:3)
It's mission is OVER. Yeah, it's way out there, but aside from communicating with the spacecraft just for the sake of communicating with it, who cares if we never hear from it again? I could understand "fear" over losing contact with a craft still carrying out its mission, but this is nonsense. How would you like to be Larry Lasher? The "Project Manager". Hah, that's a good one.
Re:job security (Score:3)
Oh nothing much, samething I do everyday, try to contact that damn probe...
Re:29 years and no crash? (Score:3)
Stuff has crossed its path, past pluto it was acted on by a gravitational force of something unknown, probably a pluto like semi planet that has never been seen, this after crossing the astroid belt, and surviving all the planets which it went near. It really has had an interesting life.
HAL9000 (Score:3)
What kind of sensors/tech is on this thing? (Score:3)
Re:And Pioneer 6? (Score:3)
No, definitely Jupiter. (Score:3)
That way, not only can we have a bunch of giant H-bombs floating in Jupiter's atmosphere to turn it into one huge H-bomb and wipe out their whole invading force in one trap, but we will be immune to their carefully tuned poke-pop technology (aside from the occasional blimp).
--
Re:Pioneer (Score:3)
Re:Oh, puleeez (Was: Re:sign of the times) (Score:4)
Re:29 years and no crash? (Score:4)
I used to know some of the people that built the thing. I even saw it launch. It was quite impressive. It seems that the probe out lasted many of the workers that built it.
Re:Holy Crap! (Score:4)
The signal travels at the speed of light, and that 's all there is to it. What counts is how strong the signal is compared to the background noise.
job security (Score:4)
So, the guy was project manager for this since
1972. They kept project open all this years
expecting to reestablish contact with spacecraft again.
This is nice idea for job security. Send
something into the space and wait for
30 years to hear back from it.
Holy Crap! (Score:4)
What the hell?! Eight-watt is absolutely miniscule. Does anyone else find this absolutely amazing that such a tiny signal could be picked up from billions of miles away?
Considering that a 10-watt FM transmitter I was playing with barely travelled a couple of km, this just blows my mind. (sure, it should be considered that this was on Earth where there is a lot of radio noise, but still...)
29 years! (Score:4)
Amazing stuff (Score:4)
Just to put that in perspective, park your car in a big flat empty carpark or field at night. Switch on the sidelights (these are about 5w each). Stand as far away as you can, and see how bright they are.
Now stand 7 billion miles away...
Old tech vs new tech (Score:4)
Do I see any change on this in the future? I do not see it as very likely. Unless it pays them for it to last for a long period, they will build in a short duration life. Yes I truly believe they program products with a built in time bomb to cause it to stop functioning after a defined period. Is this right? Not on your life.
How can you change this? I no longer think that it is possible to change it. You are trained to buy the same defective products repeatedly. Engineers are trained to design it to break down by reflex. So we are stuck in the proverbial rut.
--
When I'm good I'm very good, when I'm bad I'm better, But when I'm evil you better run
Round Trip (Score:4)
$ping pioneer10
Pinging pioneer10 with 32 bytes of data:
Reply from pioneer10: bytes=32 time=78300000ms TTL=128
Reply from pioneer10: bytes=32 time=78300000ms TTL=128
Reply from pioneer10: bytes=32 time=78300000ms TTL=128
Reply from pioneer10: bytes=32 time=78300000ms TTL=128
Ping statistics for pioneer10:
Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 4, Lost = 0 (0% loss),
Approximate round trip times in milli-seconds: Minimum = 78300000ms, Maximum = 78300000ms, Average = 78300000ms
Apologies fo trying to pass a W2000 ping as coming from a real machine, I'm at work atm.
Pioneer (Score:4)
I don't know how I feel about that. What if it crashes into someones house or car or something, do we really want a map that shows where it came from? Or worse we'll be known as planet "goodwill" and other civilizations will send their broken tv's, old matresses and assorted moth ridden clothing.
Re:What kind of sensors/tech is on this thing? (Score:4)
After all, although we think we know what's out there between the stars, we have very little direct evidence. That's an especially important issue nowadays because of indications that the expansion of the universe is accelerating -- there must be something out there generating the negative pressure (which effectively produces the opposite of gravity)!
Re: Holy Crap! (Score:4)
Not Applicable (Score:4)
That's why certain alarmists were up in arms over the Cassini probe's earth flyby. (What if it were to crash? Better re-check those metric conversions.) You've got to take some risks in life to get ahead; one space probe is OK.
However, you'd have to give every citizen their own personal RTG to generate enough power to make a difference. Each one of those could probably contaminate a whole city if it were to break open. Each one will be too hot to touch for a hundred years or more. The whole USA only has enough isotopes to build a couple more of these right now.
Unfortunately, your example of Pioneer 10 proves nothing about nuclear power in general.
Re:Pioneer (Score:5)
These NASA people have no sense of humor. They should have engraved a map showing the MOON's location. When we see thousands of independence day sized saucers surrounding the Moon, at least we can say "GOTCHA" and have a short laugh before they find out and blow our asses.
See folks? Nuclear power WORKS! (Score:5)
Pay lip service to quality then buy on price (Score:5)
So what? (Score:5)
Remember that for electronics, it is far more often the case that the non-mechanical parts of the equipment far outlast their useful lifetime. We have mounds and mounds of still functional, but fairly useless electronics gear.
As for the mechanical world, I highly doubt they are designed to fall apart at a certain time. It's just not a design goal that these things should be indestructable. Maybe they could be designed to last forever. I kinda doubt you could build machines that would be capable of running 5 million miles without massive overhauls. And the price of constructing a car out of nearly wear-proof parts would make them hideously expensive. No matter how clever your engineering, you still have to face the simple fact that there is friction, and friction causes wear. For most cars, you can keep them going nearly indefinitely, if you are willing to spend the cash to keep them going. But why bother? Most people don't bother maintaining their cars properly anyhow, then bitch when the thing breaks down.
You're measuring a space probe that is travelling through a near vaccuum, with few mechanical parts that still need to work, to cars that drive through highly corrosive road salt, over pot-hole filled streets, by fairly neglectful owners. And you're wondering why the probe wins out? Oh, and have you checked the price of a space probe vs. the price of a car recently?
Quantity/quality tradeoff is deliberate. (Score:5)
You're overlooking the several probes that did work. Clementine was particularly interesting (lunar mapping probe).
That aside - this was a deliberate tradeoff. If you send out ten probes instead of one, it doesn't matter if only half work - you've still have five times as many probes out there as you otherwise would. This is the philosophy behind the "smaller, faster, cheaper" motto that Nasa has adopted.
Not sure if the Mars probes were officially part of this program or not.
Re:Solar wind studies (Score:5)
What I find really fascinating is that the radio waves that it sends back are red shifted beyond belief by the time they reach us. And with the earth's rotation around the sun, sometimes we are actually catching up with the probe, and sometimes were running away from it very quickly. So, there is no set mathetmatical formula to run the signal through and get it at the state it was in when the probe sent it. They have to run it through a bunch of variables just to understand what it sent back.
Take that into account, and the fact that modern computer's are too complex to talk to this thing (I think its on board "computer" has an instruction set of like, FOUR), and you have a technological marvel at work. Detecting the heiopause is cool, but I think that we can still use it at all is just fascinating and validates the project itself.
And for those of you who don't care, Nasa doesn't fund this anymore so its not costing you tax money. Its all volunteer driven, so quit complaining.
Sure there is! (Score:5)
Except for, "I'm 7 billion miles away AND STILL FUNCTIONING! Kiss my low-tech metallic ASS, you planned-obsolesence designers!"
The simple fact of its existence is enough to keep reminding ourselves that Americans used to know how to make things that went the distance. Now we make things cheaply, quickly, and crappily, and we do it on purpose.
Re:Cool, But So What? (Score:5)
Well if you were to read the Pioneer web page [nasa.gov] that was linked in the article, you'd know that
I'm not sure what that means, but it looks like they are tracking it for a reason!
Re:NASA's site /.'ed (Score:5)
Re:Cool, But So What? (Score:5)
Re:What kind of sensors/tech is on this thing? (Score:5)
It was instrumented up for exploration of the outer planets. Unless it passes some large planet or other celestial body it's not going to perform any more meaningful tasks. This link describes the mission and instruments it carries. A quick list:
Re:Quantity/quality tradeoff is deliberate. (Score:5)
Yes, sadly that was only the first part of Clementine's planned mission. The probe was lost before the second part (asteroid fly-by).
Anyway, it's true that media report ONLY those probes that failed, and keep being silent on the many more that are successful.
And don't forget that Pioneer, Voyager and co. were hugely expensive at the time. The Voyagers, for example, had three complete systems on board - just to be sure that if one or two failed, the other could keep working. And it worked
sign of the times (Score:5)
NEWSFLASH - Pioneer 10 spacecraft contacts NASA (Score:5)
Last Sunday Pioneer 10 contacted NASA, ending fears that all intelligent life on Earth had been extinguished 29 years into a mission that has left Earth more than 7 billion miles distant.
A radio antenna on the sunward side received a signal from NASA on Saturday, marking the first time that intelligent life had been contacted since Aug. 24, the air-date of the final 'Survivor' episode. The spacecraft was launched March 2, 1972.
"Evidently there is still hope," Pioneer 10 subroutine 24A commented to itself during an internal status report on Sunday. "After 7 months of 'Survivor' and 'Big Brother' style programming flooding the airwaves, it was not expected that any intelligent life could survive. Contact with NASA has proved that theory wrong."
NASA, established October 1, 1958, has for years been considered a haven for intelligent life on Earth. Debate continues between subroutine 3F2 and subroutine A09 over the exact meaning of the received NASA message, "all your base are belong to us".
...Pentapod
8W is loud (Score:5)
I think the more amazing thing is that Pioneer has still some functioning instruments.
Solar wind studies (Score:5)
Without those, you could not detect the heliopause. Heliopause should be a schock where the solar wind hits the interstellar gas and magnetic field. If Pioneer makes it past the heliopause, we have first direct measurements of the properties of interstellar space. There is also lots of complex plasma physics involved in the heliopause itself.
This will not give any pretty pictures for the general public, but for the more science literate, this might be more interesting.
Pioneer is a HPB! Boot him! (Score:5)
Seems like every time you join a multiplayer game these days, there has to be ONE extrasolar spacecraft with a ping of 21 hours dragging the rest of the players down.
How about someone tries to portscan the bastard? At 21 hours a shot We'll have covered Netbios, HTTP and FTP before the month is out.