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NASA Shuts Off Instrument on Voyager 1 to Keep Spacecraft Operating
(science.nasa.gov)
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Well it doesn’t have a tank of gasoline and an engine, if that’s what you mean. I think the article is using simplified language, but yeah if they get too cold then the hydrazine lines for the course adjustment thrusters will freeze up and then the antenna will drift out of alignment with earth and we won’t be able to communicate with it anymore
I knew it had RCS, but I didn't expect it to still have any juice left. I assumed the antenna was aimed with an electrical tilting base. It's fixed?
Yep, though it doesn't have to use much propellant to keep itself oriented as there aren't really any forces acting on it, so the only thing to correct is whatever rotation was introduced by the last thruster firing. Just a tiny correction once or twice an hour is needed (which seems frequent, but it's an extremely short firing, in the millisecond range).
Thank you, that was very educational!