News

Mountain Man Rendezvous in Riverton isn’t just held near a historic rendezvous site, it’s the actual site. It's where Jim ...
In fact, the new steed isn’t a real horse at all. The black mechanical horse — named Black Jack by the crew at Eagle Mount — is an adaptive equestrian simulator designed to assist trainers in creating ...
Come along on an unforgettable adventure through Glacier National Park in Montana! We’ll hike to the breathtaking Grinnell Glacier, take in panoramic mountain views, and enjoy the park’s crystal-clear ...
NASA's Voyager 1, launched in 1977, explores interstellar space. Antenna upgrades in Australia will enhance communication for future lunar missions.
Engineers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California have revived a set of thrusters aboard the Voyager 1 spacecraft that had been considered inoperable since 2004. Fixing the ...
The Voyager 1 spacecraft is functioning normally again after the aging probe’s dwindling power supply triggered a communications blackout. It’s one of several challenges faced by the ...
NASA and Voyager 1 resumed communications and operations after a fault protection system switched the interstellar spacecraft's mode of communication to one using less power.
NASA's 47-year-old Voyager 1 spacecraft recently established contact with Earth after a brief halt with the help of a radio transmitter that has not been used since 1981.
Voyager 1 remains humanity’s furthest outpost, hurtling across interstellar space at 38,210 miles per hour. However, NASA lost communication with the beloved space probe on October 19. The space ...
On October 17, Voyager 1 switched its main radio transmitter to a different frequency, leaving its flight team at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory confused at the spacecraft’s apparent silence.
NASA lost contact with the interstellar Voyager 1 spacecraft for nearly a week after a technical glitch shut off the probe's main transmitter. Using Voyager's weaker backup transmitter, engineers ...
Voyager 1 communications have once again hit a snap, with the interstellar probe somehow turning off its main radio transmitter.