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NASA engineers at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory shut down the Low-energy Charged Particles experiment (LECP) on Voyager 1 on April 17, 2026 to conserve dwindling onboard power after an unexpected drop in February.
The command, sent across more than a day of light-time delay, placed the long-running sensor into a low-power state while leaving a small motor (about 0.5 watts) active so the instrument could potentially be reactivated if extra energy becomes available.
LECP, active since Voyager's 1977 launch, has been a key source of data on the interstellar medium; its loss reduces the probeâs suite of instruments to two functioning experiments that measure plasma waves and magnetic fields.
The shutdown follows a similar deactivation on Voyager 2 in March 2025.
NASA says the move should buy Voyager 1 roughly a year of âbreathing roomâ while engineers prepare a broader power-saving manoeuvre nicknamed the âBig Bang,â with tests planned on Voyager 2 in MayâJune and, if successful, implementation on Voyager 1 no earlier than July.
The twin probes run on aging radioisotope thermoelectric generators that lose roughly four watts a year as plutonium decays.
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