#dss13 — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #dss13, aggregated by home.social.
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@barrygoldman1 @canberradsn By my accounting, #DSS43 when uplinking with Voyager 2 puts out the second-most-intense radio beam now available.
The first-most-intense is the Goldstone solar system radar on #DSS13, but it is again on the wrong side of the planet.
(Subject to caveats about some military radars. The Arecibo Observatory had a more powerful transmitter, but it is now lost.)
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@barrygoldman1 @canberradsn By my accounting, #DSS43 when uplinking with Voyager 2 puts out the second-most-intense radio beam now available.
The first-most-intense is the Goldstone solar system radar on #DSS13, but it is again on the wrong side of the planet.
(Subject to caveats about some military radars. The Arecibo Observatory had a more powerful transmitter, but it is now lost.)
-
@barrygoldman1 @canberradsn By my accounting, #DSS43 when uplinking with Voyager 2 puts out the second-most-intense radio beam now available.
The first-most-intense is the Goldstone solar system radar on #DSS13, but it is again on the wrong side of the planet.
(Subject to caveats about some military radars. The Arecibo Observatory had a more powerful transmitter, but it is now lost.)
-
@barrygoldman1 @canberradsn By my accounting, #DSS43 when uplinking with Voyager 2 puts out the second-most-intense radio beam now available.
The first-most-intense is the Goldstone solar system radar on #DSS13, but it is again on the wrong side of the planet.
(Subject to caveats about some military radars. The Arecibo Observatory had a more powerful transmitter, but it is now lost.)
-
@barrygoldman1 @canberradsn By my accounting, #DSS43 when uplinking with Voyager 2 puts out the second-most-intense radio beam now available.
The first-most-intense is the Goldstone solar system radar on #DSS13, but it is again on the wrong side of the planet.
(Subject to caveats about some military radars. The Arecibo Observatory had a more powerful transmitter, but it is now lost.)
-
@barrygoldman1 @canberradsn The 70-m DSN antennas at the Deep Space Network sites were designed specifically to communicate with Voyager 2 - they were originally smaller and were upgraded to their current size before the Neptune flyby in 1989.
A few years ago, #DSS43 was further updated with a new 400 kW transmitter to be able to keep sending commands to the spacecraft.
(#DSS13 in California has a similar-power transmitter, but can't see Voyager 2 anymore. And the frequency is different.)
-
@barrygoldman1 @canberradsn The 70-m DSN antennas at the Deep Space Network sites were designed specifically to communicate with Voyager 2 - they were originally smaller and were upgraded to their current size before the Neptune flyby in 1989.
A few years ago, #DSS43 was further updated with a new 400 kW transmitter to be able to keep sending commands to the spacecraft.
(#DSS13 in California has a similar-power transmitter, but can't see Voyager 2 anymore. And the frequency is different.)
-
@barrygoldman1 @canberradsn The 70-m DSN antennas at the Deep Space Network sites were designed specifically to communicate with Voyager 2 - they were originally smaller and were upgraded to their current size before the Neptune flyby in 1989.
A few years ago, #DSS43 was further updated with a new 400 kW transmitter to be able to keep sending commands to the spacecraft.
(#DSS13 in California has a similar-power transmitter, but can't see Voyager 2 anymore. And the frequency is different.)
-
@barrygoldman1 @canberradsn The 70-m DSN antennas at the Deep Space Network sites were designed specifically to communicate with Voyager 2 - they were originally smaller and were upgraded to their current size before the Neptune flyby in 1989.
A few years ago, #DSS43 was further updated with a new 400 kW transmitter to be able to keep sending commands to the spacecraft.
(#DSS13 in California has a similar-power transmitter, but can't see Voyager 2 anymore. And the frequency is different.)
-
@barrygoldman1 @canberradsn The 70-m DSN antennas at the Deep Space Network sites were designed specifically to communicate with Voyager 2 - they were originally smaller and were upgraded to their current size before the Neptune flyby in 1989.
A few years ago, #DSS43 was further updated with a new 400 kW transmitter to be able to keep sending commands to the spacecraft.
(#DSS13 in California has a similar-power transmitter, but can't see Voyager 2 anymore. And the frequency is different.)