All the antennas of the NASA station in Madrid are concentrated on the distant Voyager 1 probe

All the antennas of the NASA station in Madrid are concentrated on the distant Voyager 1 probe
All the antennas of the NASA station in Madrid are concentrated on the distant Voyager 1 probe

For the first time, the six antennas of the NASA Deep Space Network in Robledo de Chavela (Madrid)carried out a test to receive data from the Voyager 1 probe at the same time on April 20.

Known as arraying, combining the receiving power of several antennas allows the DSN to collect very weak signals from distant spacecraft, NASA reports. An array of five antennas is currently needed to transmit scientific data from the spacecraft’s Plasma Wave System (PWS) instrument. As Voyager 1, the vehicle that has traveled the furthest distance (it is 24,000 million kilometers from Earth), goes even further, six antennas will be needed.

Although the antennas located in the three Deep Space Network complexes (Goldstone in California, Canberra in Australia and Robledo-Madrid) have already been placed before, this is the first case in which six are placed at once. Madrid It is the only deep space communications complex that currently has six operational antennas (the other two complexes have four each). Each complex consists of one 70-meter antenna and several 34-meter antennas.

Voyager 1 is one of the two vehicles (along with its twin Voyager 2) that has left the solar system and now traverse interstellar space, so its signal on Earth is much weaker than that of any other spacecraft the DSN communicates with. Currently, the signal from Voyager 1 takes more than 22 and a half hours to travel from the spacecraft to Earth. To better receive radio communications from Voyager 1, a large antenna (or an array of multiple smaller antennas) can be used.

The Deep Space Network allows missions to track, send commands and receive scientific data from distant spacecraft. With a total of 14 antennas in operation, the network currently supports more than 40 missions and is expected to support another 40 to be launched in the coming years.

Madrid station is managed on behalf of NASA by the National Institute of Aerospace Technology (INTA).

 
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