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KY_EnviroGuy

(14,517 posts)
12. Low data rate to save power....
Tue Jan 1, 2019, 05:11 PM
Jan 2019

Last edited Wed Jan 2, 2019, 04:09 PM - Edit history (1)

Spacecraft only has a 15 watt transmitter to conserve fuel and Deep Space Network ground station use is shared with many other users.

See: https://eyes.nasa.gov/dsn/dsn.html (New Horizons' ID is "NHPC" )

I just checked the DSN page and New Horizons was transmitting to the Goldstone facility at 841 bits per second. This is a much slower rate than previous events from this mission (see below).

From Johns Hopkins APL:

The Data Rate Challenge

A major challenge for the New Horizons mission is the relatively low "downlink" rate at which data can be transmitted to Earth, especially when you compare it to rates now common for high-speed Internet surfers.

During the Jupiter flyby in February 2007, New Horizons sent data home at about 38 kilobits per second (kbps), which is slightly slower than the transmission speed was for acoustic computer modems which operated over telephone lines. The average downlink rate after New Horizons passed Pluto (and sent the bulk of its encounter data back to Earth) was approximately 2,000 bits per second, a rate the spacecraft achieved by downlinking with both of its transmitters through NASA's largest antennas. Even then, it took until late 2016 to bring down all the encounter data stored on the spacecraft's recorders.

NASA's New Horizons home page is here: https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/newhorizons/main/index.html

APL's mission page is found here: http://pluto.jhuapl.edu/

APL mission summary, technical details on spacecraft powering, and complete technical summary PDFs are found here:

http://pluto.jhuapl.edu/News-Center/Resources.php#Fact-Sheets

As an interesting side note, this mission was almost canceled by W's administration but thank goodness NASA's scientists put up a hell of a fight and got it funded.

..........
below are more details - link to the project Horizons site NRaleighLiberal Jan 2019 #1
Is that red thingy thru it naturally-formed? Dennis Donovan Jan 2019 #2
yah, amazing resolution on that, hey! NRaleighLiberal Jan 2019 #3
It represents the axis of rotation... Rollo Jan 2019 #19
Looks like a sonogram. George II Jan 2019 #4
can't wait until the data comes back to clean up the pics NRaleighLiberal Jan 2019 #5
Those will be amazing. One and a half years, really? I guess they're coming back... George II Jan 2019 #7
Low data rate to save power.... KY_EnviroGuy Jan 2019 #12
No No No ! NOT..... reACTIONary Jan 2019 #23
Corrected and added links. Thanks. KY_EnviroGuy Jan 2019 #32
The images are compressed before transmission .... reACTIONary Jan 2019 #24
Great analogy PJMcK Jan 2019 #27
A new higher resolution image: El Supremo Jan 2019 #6
Bazinga! George II Jan 2019 #8
One stale peanut! Roasted 4.6 B years ago! NRaleighLiberal Jan 2019 #9
+1 n/t FSogol Jan 2019 #30
NASA travels 4 billion miles and discovers life. LastLiberal in PalmSprings Jan 2019 #10
+1. Al Capp. KY_EnviroGuy Jan 2019 #14
Well, they did already find Pluto on Pluto at 3 billion miles aeromanKC Jan 2019 #17
I prefer the heart interpretation. :) nt reACTIONary Jan 2019 #21
K&R, thanks for posting red dog 1 Jan 2019 #11
It's a remarkable achievement for science and engineering PJMcK Jan 2019 #28
Wow! justgamma Jan 2019 #13
Those photos are just breathtaking. PatrickforO Jan 2019 #15
Let me know when they find The Pattern. FSogol Jan 2019 #31
OK... CCExile Jan 2019 #16
Looks to me more like a non-contact binary localroger Jan 2019 #18
It's on its way nt reACTIONary Jan 2019 #22
bowling pin? Takket Jan 2019 #20
They said it was "peanut shaped." They were right! Nitram Jan 2019 #25
Looks like Cupid missed and hit this thing by mistake. Kablooie Jan 2019 #26
... trusty elf Jan 2019 #29
Enhance! LudwigPastorius Jan 2019 #33
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