Twin Voyager Probes 25 Years In Flight
pbranes writes: "CNN has an article discussing the 25th anniversary of both of the Voyager spacecraft and what the next few years hold for the spacecraft. Scientists believe that they can maintain contact with the spacecraft for at least 20 more years, and they hope that the spacecraft passes the heliopause, the boundary for interstellar space, during this time." We've mentioned the long-term prospects of these probes before; it's not long until they may meet Termination Shock.
Ok, it's a slow day at work... The Voyager 1 probe has traveled roughly 7.8 billion miles from Earth.
If you were commuting every work day around 25 miles each way, plus an extra 50 on the weekends(assuming current day prices and vehicles):
You would have had to work for 500,000 years before retiring to drive this far.
You would have had to have used roughly 260 million gallons of gas (around $390 million).
You would probably have to buy around 52,000 vehicles before retirement. This would run you somewhere in the range of $936 million.
You would need 2.6 million oil changes (unless you procrastinate like me and do it only every 8-10K miles, in which case, you would only need around 870,000 oil changes.) This would set you back around $52 million.
The repairs the the vehicles could run you anywhere from $100 - $156 million, (not including the towing costs... Zoikes!)
If you chose to do it as one long road trip (assuming 8 hours rest per day), it would take you around 21,370 years. To the above costs, you would have to add the $52 to $100 million in road munchies.
There may be no "I" in team, but there's also no "F" in way.
The Times has a nice writeup of the upcoming anniversary.
It can be found here.
Just you're average nitpicker.
Just you're average nitpicker.
Please tell me the misuse of "you're" is supposed to be a joke.
Don't Bogart the fish sticks
Yes, but will it come back looking for The Creator in a couple hundred years?
Has anyone considered whether the probes will even make it safely past the Oort cloud ?
Seems navigating that obstacle course (of course, navigation isn't the word, it'll be pure luck at this point) would be of more concern.
Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
I communicate with it every night.
Impressive, indeed. Especially, maybe, considering the very weak signal this transmits to earth. Hopefully they will reach and pass the heliopause and reach interstellar space.
Will work for bandwidth