Ah, Voyager has left the building.
Yesterday NASA confirmed that the unmanned probe called
Voyager 1, launched 36 years ago this month, has boldly gone where nothing from
this planet has gone before. We’re pretty sure.
It’s doing a good job; but so is its sister craft. Voyager 2, is also still soldiering on. And I have a personal stake in V2.
Back in 1977 I was working for the Pasadena Star-News; I’d started as an intern at the beginning of
the summer (just before my junior year in college), but when a couple of their
reporters were invalided out, they brought me back as staff writer. Getting
money to write stories every day. I thought I’d been hauled straight into
heaven without all that pesky business of dying first.
They put me on General Assignment, with an emphasis on
features, because it was always the human side of the stories that interested
me. And I have a gift for it.
But on 20 August 1977, for some reason, the guy who reported the
science beat wasn’t available to get out to Jet Propulsion Lab to cover the
launch of Voyager 2 (which was sent up a couple of weeks before Voyager 1, but
on a slower trajectory). So they sent me, one of my last assignments before the
Fall semester started.
I didn't really know anything about the program, had never been to JPL, so I focused on what I do best: the people.
What I found was a bunch of mostly men (though a few
women), in short-sleeved shirts, as high as it’s possible to be in a strict
no-booze/no-drugs work environment. And before the days of energy-drinks. They
were whooping and wheeing, just buzzing around the room like bees on
supercharged pollen.
And what I remember was one of them explaining to me that
what the whole Voyager program was “like putting together a huge jigsaw puzzle
with the picture side down and you’re not sure you have all the pieces.” But
they were thoroughly and completely dedicated to putting that sucker together
and figuring out what to do with the picture that emerged.
I often thought of that when I watched Space Shuttle
launches (and disasters). It’s a tremendous leap of faith to embark on projects
like that.
Speed well, Voyager.
2 comments:
Will you be around to write another story in 30,000 years when it actually exits our solar system? So many years to go 11 billion miles. I can't even begin to imagine how many it needs to go to exit the system.
If I am around in 30,000 years, Robert, it'll probably be in the newspapers. Or at least on Twitter.
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