calex
Canberra big dish is seen doing Voyager 1 upward transmit (S band) currently. No data seen coming down.
The 70m dish at Canberra is transmitting 99kw on S band right now https://eyes.nasa.gov/apps/dsn-now/dsn.html
Can someone more knowledgeable clarify the meaning of all the nuances in DSN Now?
Instead of interpreting squiggles, you can select the antenna, and see info in the bottom right pane. Click 'More detail' to see what they're transmitting and receiving.
[...]Then, on Oct. 19, communication appeared to stop entirely. The flight team suspected that Voyager 1’s fault protection system was triggered twice more and that it turned off the X-band transmitter and switched to a second radio transmitter called the S-band. While the S-band uses less power, Voyager 1 had not used it to communicate with Earth since 1981. It uses a different frequency than the X-band transmitters signal is significantly fainter. The flight team was not certain the S-band could be detected at Earth due to the spacecraft’s distance, but engineers with the Deep Space Network were able to find it.
So they will need a 70 meter antenna and at most get 10-20 bits/sec.
Quote from: LouScheffer on 10/29/2024 01:35 pmSo they will need a 70 meter antenna and at most get 10-20 bits/sec.39.52 bps at S band right now through Madrid.