
Copernical Team
Voyager 1 team accomplishes tricky thruster swap

Engineers working on NASA's Voyager 1 probe have successfully mitigated an issue with the spacecraft's thrusters, which keep the distant explorer pointed at Earth so that it can receive commands, send engineering data, and provide the unique science data it is gathering.
After 47 years, a fuel tube inside the thrusters has become clogged with silicon dioxide, a byproduct that appears with age from a rubber diaphragm in the spacecraft's fuel tank. The clogging reduces how efficiently the thrusters can generate force. After weeks of careful planning, the team switched the spacecraft to a different set of thrusters.
The thrusters are fueled by liquid hydrazine, which is turned into gases and released in tens-of-milliseconds-long puffs to gently tilt the spacecraft's antenna toward Earth.
AI distinguishes dark matter signals from cosmic noise

Parker Solar Probe Lines Up for Final Venus Flyby

NASA's Hubble, Chandra find supermassive black hole duo

Massive merger could explain origin of Milky Way's supermassive black hole

Formation of super-Earths proven limited near metal-poor stars

AI-Assisted Discovery Reveals How Microbial Proteins Adapt to Extreme Pressures

Mystery of Trans-Neptunian Orbits Solved by Stellar Flyby

Rover trials demonstrate autonomous sampling capabilities in UK quarry

Find Me on the Moon: NASA Seeks Navigation Solutions for Lunar Exploration
