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NATU "NASA's Funding Shortfall Means Journey's End for Voyager Probes"
Tony Reichhardt,Washington http://www.nature.com/news/2005/0503...l/434125a.html [EXCERPT] NASA has told scientists working on some of the agency's longest-running space missions - including the twin Voyagers now speeding towards the edge of the Solar System - that they may have to shut down operations in October to save money. |
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![]() Jim Oberg wrote: NATU "NASA's Funding Shortfall Means Journey's End for Voyager Probes" Tony Reichhardt,Washington http://www.nature.com/news/2005/0503...l/434125a.html [EXCERPT] NASA has told scientists working on some of the agency's longest-running space missions - including the twin Voyagers now speeding towards the edge of the Solar System - that they may have to shut down operations in October to save money. What exactly is involved in "operations" for the Voyager probes at this point? I would think the only cost would be devoting the time from the DSN antennas and logging the data. It certainly seems like we could just be doing occaisional listening to see if the probe motion matches predictions, at least until the Pioneer deceleration mystery is solved... However, if Voyager is still costing NASA more than $500,000 a year, I would say it has passed the point of diminishing returns. Tom Cuddihy |
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![]() "Tom Cuddihy" wrote i However, if Voyager is still costing NASA more than $500,000 a year, I would say it has passed the point of diminishing returns. Tom, there's major science discoveries still ahead, as V-1 approaches the heliopause and enters galactic space. |
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![]() "Tom Cuddihy" wrote in message oups.com... What exactly is involved in "operations" for the Voyager probes at this point? I would think the only cost would be devoting the time from the DSN antennas and logging the data. It certainly seems like we could just be doing occaisional listening to see if the probe motion matches predictions, at least until the Pioneer deceleration mystery is solved... However, if Voyager is still costing NASA more than $500,000 a year, I would say it has passed the point of diminishing returns. This could also be partly politics. NASA threatens to cut programs with highly visible names like Voyager unless it gets the funding it "needs". Jeff -- Remove icky phrase from email address to get a valid address. |
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Jeff Findley wrote:
"Tom Cuddihy" wrote in message oups.com... What exactly is involved in "operations" for the Voyager probes at this point? I would think the only cost would be devoting the time from the DSN antennas and logging the data. It certainly seems like we could just be doing occaisional listening to see if the probe motion matches predictions, at least until the Pioneer deceleration mystery is solved... However, if Voyager is still costing NASA more than $500,000 a year, I would say it has passed the point of diminishing returns. This could also be partly politics. NASA threatens to cut programs with highly visible names like Voyager unless it gets the funding it "needs". There is also a funny accounting issue involved in some of these numbers in comparison to previous years. NASA has been mandated to move to full-cost accounting, so that services such as DSN use now appear on individual projects' books. On paper this was a zero-sum change, but will make some programs look more expensive than they did when such things were absorbed into the overall agency budget. Bill Keel |
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![]() "William C. Keel" wrote in message ... There is also a funny accounting issue involved in some of these numbers in comparison to previous years. NASA has been mandated to move to full-cost accounting, so that services such as DSN use now appear on individual projects' books. On paper this was a zero-sum change, but will make some programs look more expensive than they did when such things were absorbed into the overall agency budget. While this is true, I don't think that the Voyagers in particular take up very much DSN time, but since they're so far away, I'm sure only the biggest dishes can be used to pick up their faint signals. I took a look at this site, but was unable to find out how much time or money is devoted to which missions: http://dsnscience.jpl.nasa.gov/office.html Jeff -- Remove icky phrase from email address to get a valid address. |
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![]() "Jeff Findley" wrote in message ... "William C. Keel" wrote in message ... There is also a funny accounting issue involved in some of these numbers in comparison to previous years. NASA has been mandated to move to full-cost accounting, so that services such as DSN use now appear on individual projects' books. On paper this was a zero-sum change, but will make some programs look more expensive than they did when such things were absorbed into the overall agency budget. While this is true, I don't think that the Voyagers in particular take up very much DSN time, but since they're so far away, I'm sure only the biggest dishes can be used to pick up their faint signals. I took a look at this site, but was unable to find out how much time or money is devoted to which missions: http://dsnscience.jpl.nasa.gov/office.html Jeff I believe the number I saw this morning was $4.3M per anum. |
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On 2005-03-10, Jeff Findley wrote:
While this is true, I don't think that the Voyagers in particular take up very much DSN time, but since they're so far away, I'm sure only the biggest dishes can be used to pick up their faint signals. From http://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/weekly-reports/, in the first two weeks of 2005, hours of "DSN scheduled support" we "large aperture coverage" other coverage Voyager 1 21.8h 107.9h Voyager 2 61.2h 55.4h Total 83.0h 163.3h Voyager 2 is 25% further away, which explains why it needs more large aperture coverage and less "other" coverage. I guess large aperture means the 70m dishes. All in all, about 18 hours per day. Scaling these numbers up, this is about 2160 hours of large aperture coverage and 4260 hours of other coverage per year. Taking a wild guess of the cost of an hour of DSN support as $400 for large aperture and $100 for small aperture gives a cost of about $1.3 million per year. -- Peter Evans, Berlin, Germany |
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Jim Oberg wrote:
NATU "NASA's Funding Shortfall Means Journey's End for Voyager Probes" Tony Reichhardt,Washington http://www.nature.com/news/2005/0503...l/434125a.html [EXCERPT] NASA has told scientists working on some of the agency's longest-running space missions - including the twin Voyagers now speeding towards the edge of the Solar System - that they may have to shut down operations in October to save money. The Voyagers are coming close to the end of the heliosphere and would have been the first man-made machines to reach interstellar space. That kind of space is vastly different than what we find in the influence sphere of the Sun. (The heliosphere). The composition, particle/count, etc of interstellar space will become increasingly interesting when we start to understand what is the composition of our galactic neighborhood. Such things are beyond the understanding and intellectual ability of the Bush administration however. Stop science, and start the hype about "the moon and beyond". Once all science is gone from NASA, you shut down it altogether in the next financial squeeze. The Bush administration needs 1.8 bill dollars a day to get going. This is furnished by foreign investors, but as even Greenspan acknowledges, this is not going to last forever. In the impeding financial squeeze, NASA will completely disappear. |
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jacob navia wrote:
That kind of space is vastly different than what we find in the influence sphere of the Sun. (The heliosphere). I'm not sure what's so different about the area farther out. It's probably full of hot air, just like you. Such things are beyond the understanding and intellectual ability of the Bush administration however. Je pense que vous croyez tout qu'on lit dans 'Le Monde.' Peut-etre essayer de faire quelque chose plus difficile, comme de penser actuellment...vous singe cedant mangeant de fromage... Once all science is gone from NASA, you shut down it altogether in the next financial squeeze. The Bush administration needs 1.8 bill dollars a day to get going. This is furnished by foreign investors, but as even Greenspan acknowledges, this is not going to last forever. Your understanding of international currency finance is on a par with your understanding of space science... |
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