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NASA temporarily loses contact with V'ger
(arstechnica.com)
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Can someone ELI5 then why it's possible to make this mistake then? Like, why didn't they make that possible for someone to adjust in the first place?
If the antenna isn't pointed at us, it can't hear the commands we send.
We do have to be able to tell it to point the antenna away from Earth sometimes... to point sensors at a target of interest or to align thrusters in a certain direction for a maneuver. We don't need to do these things much anymore, but the ability was critical during planetary flybys.
If we point it away in purpose, we also tell it to point back at Earth when it finishes what it's doing.
We don't tell it to automatically reset the orientation more often because that would waste fuel. When it runs out of fuel, it has no way to maintain the antenna orientation and we loose contact forever.
Ah, this is what I was looking for. Makes sense, thanks!
In this case I doubt it would be as simple as a mistake. That poor little spaceship is really old and baked by solar and cosmic radiation. There would just be no way to perfectly simulate the impact of your commands on the ground. Coupled with unstable power from a dying nuclear battery. I would not want to be the programmer responsible for that one. The fact that it works at all is amazing.