NASA can radiate a sign to Mars in a short time. The Voyager 1 shuttle is so distant, it requires very nearly 22 hours to get a radio message.
Presently a few 14.6 billion miles from Earth, the organization's unbelievable test began sending strange, suspicious messages back to NASA this year. The 45-year-old shuttle seemed to work regularly something else in the universe, yet all the same radiated back some "distorted data" about its situation in space.
Back on Earth, the test's architects as of late tackled the issue. They tracked down that Voyager's demeanor verbalization and control framework, or AACS — a basic framework that guarantees Voyager's sign getting recieving wire focuses at our planet — began directing its data through a "PC known to have quit working a long time back." Ultimately, this tainted and jumbled the information.
It's obscure why the framework started speaking with an outdated PC. Some place on board the many years old specialty, something is astray. However, Voyager engineers don't believe it's a risk, and hope to find the root misfire in the long run.