NASA Turns Off 2 Voyager Science Instruments to Extend Mission

NASA Turns Off 2 Voyager Science Instruments to Extend Mission

5 min read

Preparations for Next Moonwalk Simulations Underway (and Underwater)

An artist’s concept of the Voyager spacecraft, set against a starry blue and purple background.
An artist’s concept depicts one of NASA’s Voyager probes. The twin spacecraft launched in 1977.
NASA/JPL-Caltech

The farthest-flung human-made objects will be able to take their science-gathering even farther, thanks to these energy-conserving measures.

Mission engineers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California turned off the cosmic ray subsystem experiment aboard Voyager 1 on Feb. 25 and will shut off Voyager 2’s low-energy charged particle instrument on March 24. Three science instruments will continue to operate on each spacecraft. The moves are part of an ongoing effort to manage the gradually diminishing power supply of the twin probes.

Launched in 1977, Voyagers 1 and 2 rely on a radioisotope power system that generates electricity from the heat of decaying plutonium. Both lose about 4 watts of power each year.

“The Voyagers have been deep space rock stars since launch, and we want to keep it that way as long as possible,” said Suzanne Dodd, Voyager project manager at JPL. “But electrical power is running low. If we don’t turn off an instrument on each Voyager now, they would probably have only a few more months of power before we would need to declare end of mission.”

The two spacecraft carry identical sets of 10 science instruments. Some of the instruments, geared toward collecting data during planetary flybys, were turned off after both spacecraft completed their exploration of the solar system’s gas giants.

The instruments that remained powered on well beyond the last planetary flyby were those the science team considered important for studying the solar system’s heliosphere, a protective bubble of solar wind and magnetic fields created by the Sun, and interstellar space, the region outside the heliosphere. Voyager 1 reached the edge of the heliosphere and the beginning of interstellar space in 2012; Voyager 2 reached the boundary in 2018. No other human-made spacecraft has operated in interstellar space.

Last October, to conserve energy, the project turned off Voyager 2’s plasma science instrument, which measures the amount of plasma — electrically charged atoms — and the direction it is flowing. The instrument had collected only limited data in recent years due to its orientation relative to the direction that plasma flows in interstellar space. Voyager 1’s plasma science instrument had been turned off years ago because of degraded performance.

Interstellar Science Legacy

The cosmic ray subsystem that was shut down on Voyager 1 last week is a suite of three telescopes designed to study cosmic rays, including protons from the galaxy and the Sun, by measuring their energy and flux. Data from those telescopes helped the Voyager science team determine when and where Voyager 1 exited the heliosphere.

Scheduled for deactivation later this month, Voyager 2’s low-energy charged particle instrument measures the various ions, electrons, and cosmic rays originating from our solar system and galaxy. The instrument consists of two subsystems: the low-energy particle telescope for broader energy measurements, and the low-energy magnetospheric particle analyzer for more focused magnetospheric studies.

Both systems use a rotating platform so that the field of view is 360 degrees, and the platform is powered by a stepper motor that provides a 15.7-watt pulse every 192 seconds. The motor was tested to 500,000 steps — enough to guarantee continuous operation through the mission’s encounters with Saturn, which occurred in August 1980 for Voyager 2. By the time it is deactivated on Voyager 2, the motor will have completed more than 8.5 million steps.

“The Voyager spacecraft have far surpassed their original mission to study the outer planets,” said Patrick Koehn, Voyager program scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “Every bit of additional data we have gathered since then is not only valuable bonus science for heliophysics, but also a testament to the exemplary engineering that has gone into the Voyagers — starting nearly 50 years ago and continuing to this day.”

Addition Through Subtraction

Mission engineers have taken steps to avoid turning off science instruments for as long as possible because the science data collected by the twin Voyager probes is unique. With these two instruments turned off, the Voyagers should have enough power to operate for about a year before the team needs to shut off another instrument on both spacecraft.

In the meantime, Voyager 1 will continue to operate its magnetometer and plasma wave subsystem. The spacecraft’s low-energy charged particle instrument will operate through the remainder of 2025 but will be shut off next year.  

Voyager 2 will continue to operate its magnetic field and plasma wave instruments for the foreseeable future. Its cosmic ray subsystem is scheduled to be shut off in 2026.

With the implementation of this power conservation plan, engineers believe the two probes could have enough electricity to continue operating with at least one science instrument into the 2030s. But they are also mindful that the Voyagers have been weathering deep space for 47 years and that unforeseen challenges could shorten that timeline.

Long Distance

Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 remain the most distant human-made objects ever built. Voyager 1 is more than 15 billion miles (25 billion kilometers) away. Voyager 2 is over 13 billion miles (21 billion kilometers) from Earth.

In fact, due to this distance, it takes over 23 hours to get a radio signal from Earth to Voyager 1, and 19½ hours to Voyager 2.

“Every minute of every day, the Voyagers explore a region where no spacecraft has gone before,” said Linda Spilker, Voyager project scientist at JPL. “That also means every day could be our last. But that day could also bring another interstellar revelation. So, we’re pulling out all the stops, doing what we can to make sure Voyagers 1 and 2 continue their trailblazing for the maximum time possible.”

For more information about NASA’s Voyager missions, visit:
https://science.nasa.gov/mission/voyager

News Media Contacts

DC Agle / Calla Cofield
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
818-653-6297 / 626-808-2469
agle@jpl.nasa.gov / calla.e.cofield@jpl.nasa.gov

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Mar 05, 2025

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Anthony Greicius

Crew Works Vein Scans and Muscle Stimulation Prior to Upcoming Departure

Crew Works Vein Scans and Muscle Stimulation Prior to Upcoming Departure

This celestial image captured by NASA astronaut Don Pettit using a camera with low light and long duration settings pointed out a window on the SpaceX Dragon crew spacecraft shows the Milky Way beyond Earth's horizon crowned by an atmospheric glow. The Large and Small Magellanic Clouds are also distinguishable as the International Space Station orbited 257 miles above the Pacific Ocean just east of Hawaii.
This celestial image captured by astronaut Don Pettit shows the Milky Way beyond Earth’s horizon crowned by an atmospheric glow. The Large and Small Magellanic Clouds are also distinguishable as the space station orbited above the Pacific Ocean.
NASA/Don Pettit

Vein scans and muscle stimulation were the primary research activities aboard the International Space Station on Wednesday to learn how to keep crews healthy in space. The Expedition 72 crewmates also continued preparing for an upcoming crew departure while unpacking a cargo craft.

NASA Flight Engineers Nick Hague and Don Pettit partnered throughout the day on space biology experiments providing doctors insights on how their bodies are adapting to weightlessness. Doctors use the data to continuously improve crew training and develop countermeasures to help astronauts maintain their strength and fitness during long-duration space missions.

The duo first performed vein scans in the Columbus laboratory module using the Ultrasound 2 device. Hague operated the biomedical hardware with remote guidance from doctors on the ground who were peering at Pettit’s neck, shoulder, and leg veins. Next, Pettit assisted Hague as a control unit sent signals to electrodes that stimulated Hague’s leg muscles including the quadriceps and triceps. Electrical muscle stimulation may improve muscle function, shorten workout sessions, and lead to lighter exercise equipment offsetting space-caused muscle atrophy.

Commander Suni Williams and Flight Engineer Butch Wilmore, both NASA astronauts, focused on housekeeping duties cleaning ventilation systems and checking electrical hardware inside the Harmony module’s crew quarters. Williams also set up temporary crew quarters in the Columbus module to house the SpaceX Crew-10 members targeted to arrive next week. Wilmore loaded new software on a science laptop computer in the Kibo laboratory module.

At the end of the day, Hague, Williams, and Wilmore joined Roscosmos Flight Engineer Aleksandr Gorbunov inside the SpaceX Dragon crew spacecraft and continued training and coordinated their roles before their forthcoming return to Earth. After the Crew-10 mission arrives, the homebound quartet will board Dragon a few days later, undock from the Harmony module’s space-facing port, and splash down off the coast of Florida ending the SpaceX Crew-9 mission.

Earlier, Gorbunov set up imaging hardware to observe Earth’s nighttime atmospheric glow in near-ultraviolet wavelengths and began packing for his ride back to Earth. His fellow cosmonauts, Flight Engineers Alexey Ovchinin and Ivan Vagner were back inside the Progress 91 cargo craft unloading supplies to replenish the Expedition 72 crew.

Learn more about station activities by following the space station blog, @space_station and @ISS_Research on X, as well as the ISS Facebook and ISS Instagram accounts.

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Mark A. Garcia

NASA’s SpaceX Crew-10 to Explore Deep Space Exercise, Health

NASA’s SpaceX Crew-10 to Explore Deep Space Exercise, Health

Pictured from left: Roscosmos cosmonaut Kirill Peskov, NASA astronauts Nichole Ayers and Anne McClain, and JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) astronaut mission specialist Takuya Onishi train at SpaceX facilities in Hawthorne, California (Credit: SpaceX).

During NASA’s SpaceX Crew-10 mission to the International Space Station, which is scheduled to launch in March, select members of the four-person crew will participate in exercise and medical research aimed at keeping astronauts fit on future long-duration missions.

Crew members living and working aboard the space station have access to a designated training area outfitted with a weight-lifting system, a stationary bike, and a specialized treadmill called T2. The space station is expansive enough for bulky exercise equipment that helps preserve the health and performance of astronauts in space and when they return to Earth.

However, as NASA looks to explore beyond low Earth orbit, the agency anticipates future spacecraft will not have room for large exercise equipment, like treadmills. Since walking and running are essential parts of workouts aboard the space station, NASA does not fully understand how long-duration spaceflights without a treadmill will impact crews’ health and motor functions. Consequently, NASA researchers are adjusting astronauts’ training regimens, including eliminating the use of the treadmill in some cases, to study ways that maintain crews’ strength, fitness, bone health, and balance.

In an ongoing study called Zero T2, expedition crews are divided into three groups with different workout regimens. One group continues exercising normally, using all the available equipment aboard the orbiting complex. A second group forgoes using the treadmill, relying solely on the other available equipment. While a third group will only exercise using a new, experimental, less bulky workout machine. NASA compares the groups’ health data collected before, during, and after flight to determine if the lack of treadmill use negatively impacts the crews’ fitness, muscle performance, and recovery after return to Earth.

“A treadmill takes up a lot of mass, space, and energy. This is not great for missions to Mars where every kilogram counts,” explained NASA astronaut Matthew Dominick, who participated in the same study while serving as commander of NASA’s SpaceX Crew-8 mission in 2024. “The Zero T2 experiment is helping us figure out if we can go without a treadmill and still be healthy.”

Results of the Zero T2 study will help researchers determine how treadmill-free workouts may affect crew health, which will, in turn, help NASA build realistic exercise protocols for future deep space missions. Additionally, this investigation could support design improvements for exercise devices used to prevent or treat bone, muscle, and cardiovascular health on Earth.

Beyond the Zero T2 study, select NASA crew members will perform additional studies supported by the agency’s Human Research Program during their mission. Participating crew will conduct medical exams, provide biological samples, and document spaceflight-related injuries, among other tasks. 

“Astronauts choose which studies to participate in based on their interests,” explained Cherie Oubre, a NASA scientist at the agency’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, who helps oversee human research studies carried out aboard the space station. “The experiments address important risks and gaps associated with human spaceflight.”

One set of experiments, called CIPHER (Complement of Integrated Protocols for Human Exploration Research), will help researchers understand how multiple systems within the human body adjust to varying mission durations. CIPHER study members will complete vision assessments, cognitive tests, and MRI scans to help provide a clearer picture of how the entire body is affected by space.

“The CIPHER experiment tracks changes in the eyes, bones, heart, muscles, immune system, and more,” Oubre said. “The investigation provides the most comprehensive overview of how long-duration spaceflight affects the entire human body ever conducted, helping us advance human expeditions to the Moon, Mars, and elsewhere.”

Some crew members also will contribute to a core set of measurements called Spaceflight Standard Measures. The measurements represent how the human body and mind adapt to space travel over time and serve as a basis for other spaceflight studies like CIPHER. Additionally, crew members may provide biological samples for Omics Archive, a separate study analyzing how the body reacts to long-duration spaceflight at the molecular level.

In another study, select crew members will test a potential treatment for spaceflight-associated neuro-ocular syndrome, a condition associated with brain changes and swelling of the back of the eye. Researchers are unsure what causes the syndrome or why only certain astronauts develop it, but the shift of bodily fluids toward the head in weightlessness may play a role. Some scientists believe genetics related to how the body processes B vitamins may affect how astronauts respond to those fluid shifts. Participating crew will test whether a daily B vitamin supplement can ease or prevent the development of symptoms. They also will investigate if cuffs worn on astronauts’ thighs to keep fluids in the legs could be an effective intervention.

Upon return, the select crew members will complete surveys that record any discomfort or injuries associated with landing, such as scrapes and bruises. Results of the surveys­­ ̶ when combined with data retrieved by sensors in the vehicle­­ ̶ will help researchers catalog these injuries and improve the design of spacecraft.

Crew members began participating in the studies about a year before their mission, learning about the work and offering baseline health data. They will continue to provide data for the experiments for up to two years after returning home.

____

NASA’s Human Research Program pursues the best methods and technologies to support safe, productive human space travel. Through science conducted in laboratories, ground-based analogs, commercial missions, and the International Space Station, the program scrutinizes how spaceflight affects human bodies and behaviors. Such research drives NASA’s quest to innovate ways that keep astronauts healthy and mission-ready as human space exploration expands to the Moon, Mars, and beyond.

Learn More About Exercising in Space

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station typically exercise for two hours each day. From running to cycling to weightlifting, learn how crew members complete fitness regimens in space and commit to staying healthy – even in microgravity (Credit: NASA).

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Nathan Cranford

2025 Aviation Weather Mission: Civil Air Patrol Cadets Help Scientists Study the Atmosphere with GLOBE Clouds

2025 Aviation Weather Mission: Civil Air Patrol Cadets Help Scientists Study the Atmosphere with GLOBE Clouds

2 min read

2025 Aviation Weather Mission: Civil Air Patrol Cadets Help Scientists Study the Atmosphere with GLOBE Clouds

The Science Activation Program’s NASA Earth Science Education Collaborative (NESEC) is working alongside the Civil Air Patrol (CAP) to launch the 2025 Aviation Weather Mission. The mission will engage cadets (students ages 11-20) and senior members to collect aviation-relevant observations including airport conditions, Global Learning and Observations to Benefit the Environment (GLOBE) Cloud observations, commercial aircraft information (including registration number and altitude), and satellite collocations provided by the NASA GLOBE Clouds team at NASA Langley Research Center. This mission results from a highly successful collaboration between NESEC and CAP as cadets and senior members collected cloud, air temperature, and land cover observations during the partial and total solar eclipses in 2023 and 2024, engaging over 400 teams with over 3,000 cadets and over 1,000 senior members in every state, Washington DC, and Puerto Rico.

The 2025 Aviation Weather Mission will take place from April through July 2025, collecting observations over two 4-hour periods while practicing additional skills, such as flight tracking, orienteering, and data management. So far, over 3,000 cadets in 46 wings (states) have signed up to participate.

Science Activation recently showed support for this mission through a letter of collaboration sent to CAP Major General Regena Aye in early February. NASA GLOBE Clouds and GLOBE Observer are part of the NASA Earth Science Education Collaborative (NESEC), which is led by the Institute for Global Environmental Strategies (IGES) and supported by NASA under cooperative agreement award number NNX16AE28A. NESEC is part of NASA’s Science Activation Portfolio. Learn more about how Science Activation connects NASA science experts, real content, and experiences with community leaders to do science in ways that activate minds and promote deeper understanding of our world and beyond: https://science.nasa.gov/learn

Cadets from the Virginia wing making cloud observations as they prepare for the 2025 Aviation Weather Mission.
Cadets from the Virginia wing making cloud observations as they prepare for the 2025 Aviation Weather Mission.

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Mar 04, 2025
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NASA Climate Editorial Team
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Departing Crew Talks to Journalists, Keeps Up Human Research and Lab Maintenance

Departing Crew Talks to Journalists, Keeps Up Human Research and Lab Maintenance

NASA astronauts (from left) Butch Wilmore, Nick Hague, and Suni Williams talk to journalists on the ground during their Pre-Departure News Conference on March 4, 2025.
NASA astronauts (from left) Butch Wilmore, Nick Hague, and Suni Williams talk to journalists on the ground during their pre-departure news conference on March 4, 2025.
NASA

Crew departure preparations and cargo unloading topped the schedule for the Expedition 72 crew aboard the International Space Station on Tuesday. The orbital residents also kept up their human research activities ensuring crews stay healthy while living in space.

Three NASA astronauts and one Roscosmos cosmonaut joined each other on Tuesday and practiced the procedures they will use when they depart the orbital outpost in mid-March. Nick Hague will command the SpaceX Dragon crew spacecraft with Mission Specialists Suni Williams, Butch Wilmore, and Aleksandr Gorbunov during the ride back to Earth. They used Dragon computer tablets and reviewed the steps they will use when Dragon backs away from the orbital outpost and reenters Earth’s atmosphere for a splashdown off the coast of Florida. Hague and Gorbunov have been at the station since Sept. 29, 2024. Williams and Wilmore arrived at the orbital outpost on June 6.

Williams and Wilmore, along with Hague, called down to Mission Control today and discussed their upcoming departure with journalists on the ground. Hague stated at the beginning of the pre-departure news conference, “Here in a few short days Crew-10 is going to arrive. And we are going to hand the baton to Crew-10 and we are going to return to Earth at the end of a successful long-duration mission aboard the space station.”

Their replacements, the SpaceX Crew-10 members, are targeted to launch on March 12. The next Dragon spacecraft will carry Commander Anne McClain and Pilot Nichole Ayers, both NASA astronauts, and Mission Specialists Takuya Onishi of JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) and Kirill Peskov of Roscosmos. The new quartet will join Expedition 72 before becoming the Expedition 73 crew in mid-April.

Advanced space research continued apace as the orbital residents helped scientists on the ground understand how weightlessness affects the human body. Hague was back on exercise research working out on the advanced resistive exercise device, which mimics free weights on Earth, and pedaling on an exercise cycle as a sensor-packed vest and headband recorded his health data. Pettit set up a microscope and a science laptop computer in the Kibo laboratory module to learn how cells sense gravity and possibly treat space-caused muscle atrophy and osteoporosis.

Williams and Wilmore focused on housekeeping throughout Tuesday. Williams packed trash and discarded gear inside the Cygnus space freighter before setting up a camera to photograph the Moon illuminated by sunshine reflected from Earth. Wilmore swapped out a water resupply tank in the Destiny laboratory module then reorganized cargo stowed in the Columbus laboratory module.

Roscosmos cosmonauts Alexey Ovchinin and Ivan Vagner continued unloading some of the nearly three tons of food, fuel, and supplies that arrived inside the Progress 91 cargo craft on March 1. The duo also joined Gorbunov and participated in a test for a study to improve how international crews communicate with mission controllers from around the world.

Learn more about station activities by following the space station blog, @space_station and @ISS_Research on X, as well as the ISS Facebook and ISS Instagram accounts.

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Mark A. Garcia