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Spaceprob.es catalogues all the probes that still communicate with Earth (spaceprob.es)
182 points by input_sh on Feb 28, 2021 | hide | past | favorite | 30 comments



This is really nice, but I want more data.

Everything of course only if publically available:

- Where are the probes located right now (map)?

- what is their trajectory/target location?

- what does the data look like being transmitted (I.e. Voyager isn’t more than a blip, or is it)?

- what Kind of data could be still gathered, e.g. could we ask the Probe to „take a picture“ or would the bandwidth simply not be enough?


> (I.e. Voyager isn’t more than a blip, or is it)?

According to [1], as we speak the DSS 14 antenna at Goldstone is receiving Voyager 1 data at a whooping 160 bits/sec.

[1] https://eyes.nasa.gov/dsn/dsn.html


How quickly is the bit rate degrading from Voyager?

Like if it’s 160 bits per second now, how long until it’s 100 bits per second? 10? 1?


Interesting question!

At any rate, I believe death is imminent anyway: in a few years, the RTGs will have degraded so far that no single instrument can be powered :-(


Yourself and others interested in detail, may appreciate Daniel Estévez's recent post on his use of GNU Radio and the Allen Telescope Array to detect Voyager 1 transmissions:

https://destevez.net/2021/02/voyager-1-single-dish-detection...

Also this JPL document on both Voyagers is packed. Check out the chart on page 44, regarding diminishing bitrates over the coming years:

https://descanso.jpl.nasa.gov/monograph/series13/DeepCommo_C...



Does anybody know why the bot[1] publishing Pluto photos from New Horizons has been suspended?

[1] https://twitter.com/bitsofpluto


Not an answer, but a pointer...

https://github.com/hugovk/bitsofpluto is the GitHub repo for the code

https://twitter.com/hugovk would be the person on twitter to ask.


Thanks (and sorry) for doing my homeworks


No problem. Most times the bots are lost in the "who runs that?" and its pointless to look. This one happened to have been not difficult to track down. I'm curious of the answer if you get one. ... and I see that someone dug up the answer further down.


The answer appears to be that "The Twitter Algorithm just doesn't seem to like it..."

https://twitter.com/hugovk/status/1364506939686875137


Very nice site!

Although, many links to data are broken, that is very frustrating...


fixed!


This is a lot more crowded since the last time I checked! You know I’ve been reading too much Kim Stanley Robinson when I immediately start worrying about contaminating these various celestial bodies’ surfaces...


These kinds of domains always rubbed me the wrong way. Not only does it abuse the intent of the TLD, but the dot breaks up the word in an odd place. I just imagine trying to tell someone this domain in person and it feels very awkward. Why not just go with spaceprobedata.com or spaceprobes.org, or one of the other thousands of TLDs they have now?

It seems like this is a symptom of people wanting the shortest possible domain name, similar to people refusing to use a new TLD and instead spending thousands on a .com. It's all strange to me, but maybe I'm just a rule follower who doesn't care about vanity that much.


I thought I'd seen a phrase that describes these kinds of domains. Found it:

> A domain hack is a domain name that suggests a word, phrase, or name when concatenating two or more adjacent levels of that domain.

> For example, "bir.ds" and "examp.le", using the fictitious country-code domains .ds and .le, suggest the words birds and example respectively.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_hack


Would be cool to see how often they communicate, and what data is exchanged. Also, what bandwidth and the time it takes to arrive back here.


Also [...] the time it takes to arrive back here

For reference:

    Voyager 1, interstellar space    21 lighthours
    Perseverance, Mars surface       12 lightminutes
    Artemis, lunar orbit            1.2 lightseconds


Aren't those measures of distance?


Yes, but the data travels at approximately the speed of light, so you can just drop the "light" unit in front of the time units


But where’s the fun of pedantry in that?


Sure, but conversion to travel time is trivial given a signal velocity of c. Or just assume a 'natural' system of units where c=1 :p


Delete "light" and it's the answer.


Yeah, it takes me 2 trainhours to get to work.


Maybe some of what you desire can be found here? https://eyes.nasa.gov/dsn/dsn.html


And occasionally... you get a glimpse of something neat... like dish 43 getting data from VGR2. https://i.imgur.com/ZVAnt03.png

The downlink is 160 b/s at -154.54 dBm (as I type this - might have been different in the screen shot)... and then compare that to other data feeds on other dishes.


I was not aware the 2001 mars orbiter was still operating!


It's a pretty hardcore space probe!


Very cool site! Awesome design. Awesome domain. Great job on the project.


No wonder why Maven is so freaking slow




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