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Last session, she said, she and other liberals merely staged a "prolonged debate" over the Telstar satellite...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Neuberger Says Budget Proposals Will Be Used Against Welfare | 1/25/1963 | See Source »

Diagnosis. Telstar, which had no spare transponder, was in much more serious trouble. But its case was not hopeless. Its radio beacon was transmitting normally; so were the host of instruments that report by telemetry on its internal condition. They showed that Telstar's solar cells were generating plenty of electricity. Its temperature was normal, and no intruder, such as a meteorite, had damaged its delicate nervous system. Apparently the only trouble was in the command decoders. Telstar was ablebodied, but without working decoders it could not hear and obey commands...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Space Technology: Fixing Up Telstar | 1/18/1963 | See Source »

...clue to Telstar's trouble was the curious manner in which the satellite had quit. Several times before total failure it had reluctantly obeyed a command only after it had been repeated for many minutes. This suggested that the passage of a signal through one of the ailing decoders tended to cure it in much the same way that exercise helps some human ills...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Space Technology: Fixing Up Telstar | 1/18/1963 | See Source »

...that transistors behave strangely after they are bathed in powerful radiation. Ions (electrically charged particles) released by the radiation are attracted to electrically charged parts of the transistors. There they form a surface layer that prevents the transistors from working properly. Something of this sort may have happened to Telstar. It was built to resist an expected level of radiation in space, but just before it was launched, the U.S. exploded a powerful nuclear test bomb above the atmosphere near Johnston Island (TIME, July 20). Eminent scientists had dismissed the suggestion that the test would create much high-level radiation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Space Technology: Fixing Up Telstar | 1/18/1963 | See Source »

Zero Gate. To find out whether space radiation was the guilty party, Bell engineers hooked up a command decoder just like Telstar's and exposed it to gamma rays in a shielded chamber. It went out of action quickly, and the engineers traced the trouble to a single transistor called the "zero gate" designed to react to short pulses-coded zeros-in command signals. With the zero-counting transistor blocked by ions, the decoder could receive no zeros, and a binary code, which consists only of zeros and ones, is meaningless if deprived of half its vocabulary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Space Technology: Fixing Up Telstar | 1/18/1963 | See Source »

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