How do the Voyager Spacecrafts avoid crashing into objects in interstellar space?
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They don't. The Voyagers have no way to detect objects in the vicinity. We aren't using telescopes to look for objects in their paths either. We can get away with this because space is empty. Even in the densest region of the solar system (the asteroid belts), the average distance between objects is on the order of 1 million km.
When the Voyager program just started, there was some doubt if we'd be able to fly through the asteroid belt without hitting anything. Pioneer 10 and 11 were built in part to see if we could.
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2Isn't there an answer somewhere on space SE showing the results from an impact counter on voyager indicating just how empty the space out there is? – GremlinWranger Nov 28 '23 at 07:56
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3@GremlinWranger there's some of that in answer(s) to How likely is it that the Voyager spacecrafts haven't yet been damaged by micrometeoroids? and in links therein, but there may be other posts as well. I wonder if the Voyagers ever hid behind their dishes during flybys like some later spacecraft have done? Not exactly avoidance as much as damage mitigation I guess. – uhoh Nov 28 '23 at 09:54
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3@GremlinWranger oh and for the "interstellar" aspect of the OP's question, there's answer(s) to If a spacecraft travels at 10% c will it be destroyed by interstellar dust and particles? Also somewhat related: Is it pure luck that the voyager 1 survived to travel beyond our solar system in interstellar space? – uhoh Nov 28 '23 at 10:04
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1Makes me wonder how often they're being hit by something and how big of a problem it's been... – Sixtyfive Nov 29 '23 at 11:07
We should plan for what happens if, but that 'if' is almost too remote to plan for.
– Robbie Goodwin Nov 29 '23 at 23:56