- One of the most distant space probes
ever launched into space has been contacted again and is sending back valuable
data about unexplored space. Our science editor Dr David Whitehouse reports
-
- Pioneer 10 was in every sense a pioneering
space mission. Launched on March 2nd 1972 it opened the way to the exploration
of deep space.
-
- It was the first craft to travel through
the asteroid belt, a region of rocky debris between Mars and Jupiter.
-
- It was the first craft to explore Jupiter
and on June 13th, 1983, was the first space probe to travel further than
the Sun's most distant planet.
-
-
- Since then it has been sending back information
as it heads for interstellar space with dwindling onboard power.
-
- Its goal is the so-called heliopause,
a region in space where the Sun's influence ends and true interstellar
space begins. No spacecraft has ever reached it.
-
- Pioneer 10's mission formally ended in
1997 but as part of a training program controllers of the Lunar Prospector
spacecraft in orbit around the moon detected it once again.
-
- It's still working 10.6 billion km (6.6
billion miles) away. It is so distant that light takes 19h 40m to reach
it.
-
- It is heading towards the red star Aldeberan,
the main star in the constellation of Taurus. It should get there in 2
million years time.
-
- In the unlikely event that any form of
life should find it it contains a plaque telling them about the creatures
that built it.
|