Voyager 1 and 2 Detected Something Beyond the Edge of Our Solar System

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  • Опубліковано 8 лип 2022
  • The journey of Voyager I and II beyond the orbit of Neptune.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 5 тис.

  • @davidhauton7643
    @davidhauton7643 Рік тому +6000

    Can you imagine, there must be some nasa scientists or engineers who have worked on this project their entire lives. It must be such an experience and privilege to be there from the beginning and to see the completion 45years later. Well done to the hundreds involved, I feel as if I've grown up with this project!!

    • @vomm
      @vomm Рік тому +205

      Every U.S. taxpayer has worked on this project to

    • @psychopunk8817
      @psychopunk8817 Рік тому +401

      @@vomm I mean better this than nuclear bombs.

    • @adventureswithdogs2251
      @adventureswithdogs2251 Рік тому +245

      @@vomm Total cost to date for the Voyagers- $865 million. The US has a plan in place to replace all of its land-based ICBM's with a newer type of missile beginning in 2029. Estimated cost will be $100 BILLION!

    • @robertt9342
      @robertt9342 Рік тому +109

      @@vomm . Well no… is tax payers have paid for it. You can’t be one of those people that equate money to work, are you?

    • @geigercourtier
      @geigercourtier Рік тому +22

      @@adventureswithdogs2251 cancers ready…whenever you guys have time, no rush…

  • @TooLameToDie
    @TooLameToDie Рік тому +4750

    It's taken 45 years, traveling at ludicrous speeds, for these two satellites to reach where they are today. Space is absolutely immense. That is both terrifying and awe inspiring to me.

    • @cardinalsfanforever4484
      @cardinalsfanforever4484 Рік тому +368

      No no no, light speed is too slow. We're gonna have to go right to...Ludicrous Speed

    • @Daniel-Davies-Gonstead-Student
      @Daniel-Davies-Gonstead-Student Рік тому +97

      @@cardinalsfanforever4484 *plaid*

    • @TooLameToDie
      @TooLameToDie Рік тому +136

      @@cardinalsfanforever4484 sir, we've never gone that fast before...I don't know if the ship can take it!!

    • @johnnyhunter
      @johnnyhunter Рік тому +139

      @@TooLameToDie What's the matter, Colonel Sanders? Chicken?

    • @stevenwiederholt7000
      @stevenwiederholt7000 Рік тому +22

      @@johnnyhunter
      LOL!

  • @MobileTech296
    @MobileTech296 5 місяців тому +92

    The Voyager probes were launched a month before I was born and have taken my lifetime to leave our solar system. It’s kind of mind boggling just how big space really is.

    • @baiqi44
      @baiqi44 3 місяці тому

      It'll take a lot longer than that. Leaving the Oort cloud is officially leaving the solar system. That won't happen for another 30,000 years.

    • @eustab.anas-mann9510
      @eustab.anas-mann9510 Місяць тому +2

      It will take 40000 years for Voyager to get to the nearest star.

    • @scorchedearth1451
      @scorchedearth1451 День тому +1

      Space is endless, but nobody has an idea what "endless" really means.

  • @ashlaunicaalpari4584
    @ashlaunicaalpari4584 10 місяців тому +22

    Maintaining communication for almost half a century in space is remarkable. Meanwhile Wi-Fi here on earth goes out with nearly every passing thunder storm. Lol

  • @mrhax4464
    @mrhax4464 Рік тому +1846

    Being born in 71 meant I got to witness the whole Voyager mission. From my childhood to my teens, I had that opportunity to experience the first ever close-up views of the outer planets.
    Every time I see an astronomy documentary that mentions that mission, I feel truly privileged that I got to have that experience.
    I also feel bloody old.

    • @valentincuc4101
      @valentincuc4101 Рік тому +32

      Mr. Hax. me too born 71... had the opportunity to follow the voyager missions, and its still fascinanting after 45 years they are speeding through space beyond our dreams to the next stars... but its gonna take 75.000.years to reach our nearest star(proxima centauri).

    • @carolinekelly6443
      @carolinekelly6443 Рік тому +34

      @mr Hax I agree, it's a privilege, but don't feel old, because in Light Years, we're only seconds old 🚀🛰️😃

    • @elizabethsullivan7176
      @elizabethsullivan7176 Рік тому +19

      I was born in 71 too. Voyager 2 launched 8 days after my 6th birthday. We really were born at the perfect time. 😊👍

    • @valentincuc4101
      @valentincuc4101 Рік тому

      @@elizabethsullivan7176 Liza.. when is your birthday? if you dont mind asking you?

    • @paulnolan4971
      @paulnolan4971 Рік тому +1

      @@valentincuc4101 69th like yay.
      Soz but it's prescient cos was gonna say too that I was born in 70 and avidly watched John Craven's newsround for the launch and all the news on them for YEARS. pre-internet ofc hehe

  • @davidgalea6113
    @davidgalea6113 Рік тому +4228

    the voyagers are one of the greatest engineering achievements ever made. The fact they they are still going after all these years and at such large distances is impressive. long live the voyagers !

    • @Jay-gq4cd
      @Jay-gq4cd Рік тому +63

      18 hour old comment on a 6 minute old video?????
      Love UA-cam

    • @_guitar_dad
      @_guitar_dad Рік тому +31

      How did you comment 18 hours before this video released?

    • @silentsmiles1734
      @silentsmiles1734 Рік тому +2

      this is amazing

    • @kugelblitz-zx9un
      @kugelblitz-zx9un Рік тому +47

      Maybe they were given access to this video smh or maybe it was premiered or something.

    • @2ichie
      @2ichie Рік тому +58

      Doesn’t matter what you throw into space. Could be the greatest engineering marvel or could be an old shoe but that object will travel longer than earth is alive as long as it doesn’t hit another object in space which is 0.0000000000000001% chance of it colliding.
      Kinda mind blowing that voyager or this old shoe will last longer than fucking EARTH!!!

  • @heydj6857
    @heydj6857 Рік тому +12

    i was 9, i bunked off school to watch both launches, i'm still in awe that they have lasted this long, incredible engineering. these incredible distances, another 300 years just to reach the ort cloud, and 30k years for it to leave that cloud and leave out solar system, just incredible distances which are tiny really in regards to interstellar travel. we are so small and the universe is huge. it's been crazy following all these years, every single day wondering if the craft would be destroyed or fail and here we are all these years later now beginning to reach the very end of the mission. sad that it will end but still,what a journey!

  • @sharonwetherholt6768
    @sharonwetherholt6768 Рік тому +18

    As an elementary student I remember the beginnings of space study with various projects. Voyager 1 and 2 have a fond place in my life as I encountered it when young and am able to still follow them now that I am an older, retired citizen. Amazing!

    • @bobf12
      @bobf12 Рік тому +2

      I am going to miss the little guy. He has had a spectacular life and has enriched my life greatly.

  • @frogstamper
    @frogstamper Рік тому +1228

    I remember watching the launch of both Voyagers in 77, I was thirteen at the time, and its incredible to think that now at the age of fifty eight both of these probes are still sending data back to Earth, a true testament to NASA engineering.

    • @williamlynnroden
      @williamlynnroden Рік тому +5

      @frogstamper.
      Same here.

    • @gossman75
      @gossman75 Рік тому

      I can't even get a signal to my Mother's house with my cellphone at 45 miles. Hard to believe these voyagers crafts can send and receive signals from Earth while the probes are billions of miles from the earth. WTF

    • @cliftonadlerjr.1837
      @cliftonadlerjr.1837 Рік тому +3

      I graduated in 77.

    • @davismize
      @davismize Рік тому

      But we cant go to the moon. Never did go. No proof of the single greatest achievement of mankind. Nothing they shredded all evidence.

    • @davismize
      @davismize Рік тому

      They've been stealing through conversion for decades.

  • @patd.3368
    @patd.3368 Рік тому +442

    My father worked on both these projects and on Apollo 11(the suit and the landing gears) I was a kid but my dad lived by the rules of his Secret Clearance…BUT… I do remember him telling me about a pretty good idea they had to use Saturn to buy them some travel time…now I understand what he was trying to tell me…the 173 year window for a perfect launch. He would be so pleased to know that V1 and 2 are still going. The men and women engineers he worked with were all people he came to greatly admire!!!!
    Thank you for putting together this awesome video!!!

    • @MrsCook-ml9im
      @MrsCook-ml9im Рік тому +4

      Is it true that the engineers went behind the back of the planners and ultimately led to expanding the timeframe of operation of voyagers?

    • @patd.3368
      @patd.3368 Рік тому +24

      @@MrsCook-ml9im I was 10 years old when my dad worked on Voyager… he died in 1982, so I never had a very adult conversation with him about his true work…and he was under the strict rules of Secret Clearance…Hope someone can answer your question…I’m sure there are many fascinating tales to be told

    • @puncheex2
      @puncheex2 Рік тому +10

      I appreciate your statement and your father's effort, but I question his need for clearances. I suspect he worked other programs as well that may have required clearance, but as best I know Apollo itself had no requirement above Confidential level. I worked on the Viking Mars landers project and that was all I had until I later got into some of the other things going on.

    • @siemsoftware6405
      @siemsoftware6405 Рік тому +3

      I am so excited to read your comments. Do you also work for NASA just like your father?

    • @berretta9mm158
      @berretta9mm158 Рік тому +7

      The amazing thing about the Voyager missions is that, unlike in the past when computer technology was in its earliest infancy (They were launched a year after Apollo 11), they can now be monitored and controlled by a few people in a room of a building. We've come a long way - thanks mostly to the Gemini and Apollo programs, but also to the plethora of probes, from before Voyager and onward to the present. The U.S. builds better space equipment than any other country in the world, and we still have a right to be proud of that.

  • @christine2ehgtinyhouse893
    @christine2ehgtinyhouse893 Рік тому +21

    The Voyagers are so impressive with what they've done, how long they've lasted and the amazing amount of information they've been able to relay back to the Earth. NASA has done such spectacular work on this project and on the most minimal budget. We need to celebrate our science more than we do.

    • @TheNoiseySpectator
      @TheNoiseySpectator Рік тому +1

      I have another idea.
      What about building probes _Specfically for_ traveling out of our solar system, and into deep space, then into another solar system?
      Sure they would take hundreds or thousands of years to get there, and then decades to radio back their discoveries, but so what?
      There should still be people around, then. 😊☄️🌌

  • @rashadd2615
    @rashadd2615 Рік тому +29

    Imagine 1000s of years from now a civilization finding one of the probes and listening to those golden disc. How crazy that must be of possibly seeing a different species of intelligent life completely different from your own.

    • @philipfresco
      @philipfresco Рік тому +5

      @SharrelWright not in your comment LMAO

    • @TheNoiseySpectator
      @TheNoiseySpectator Рік тому +2

      Indeed, Rashadd 😊 .
      But, I am skeptical that they could be _too different_ from us to understand the sounds on the record. Or, even realize what they are supposed to be, at all. 😞
      We have no reason to think they would have a sense of sight or hearing.

    • @dennyclosser8456
      @dennyclosser8456 4 місяці тому +1

      What are the problems with that though? Is they have to have a record player right? It’s literally like an album so I don’t know who thought it was to say. Hey, I’m sure all life out there has record players. Just saying might be a better way to try to communicate, but who knows

    • @Kids11111
      @Kids11111 3 місяці тому +2

      They'd probably eat the discs

    • @Andrew-tf8jt
      @Andrew-tf8jt Місяць тому

      Especially if they are a threat... those morons gave them directions to earth and our DNA sequence....glad I won't be here to find out if Xenomorphs are friendly or not....most likely not but not my problem.

  • @bwhog
    @bwhog Рік тому +1596

    It is beyond impressive that the technology those probes were built with has allowed them to survive, intact, and still in communication with earth for *45* years! Man, that crop of engineers *really* knew what they were doing!

    • @kingmasterlord
      @kingmasterlord Рік тому +100

      and yet a smartphone lasts a couple years

    • @shitlordflytrap1078
      @shitlordflytrap1078 Рік тому +92

      @@kingmasterlorda smartphone is a complex device that is being actively used constantly and handled often improperly. Send a smartphone into space and it'll last 20 years too, don't worry.

    • @gamerguy6990
      @gamerguy6990 Рік тому +49

      @@shitlordflytrap1078 no phones going to last that long no matter the conditions cause the batteries going to die first before most likely anything else

    • @Brainless_Memer
      @Brainless_Memer Рік тому +13

      @@gamerguy6990 the person holding the phone

    • @foxbutterfly-eden8715
      @foxbutterfly-eden8715 Рік тому +93

      I’ve had the same iPhone since 2015 and use it constantly. And when I bought it, bought it second hand. But it was one of the most expensive models; built to last.
      Most commercial products aren’t built to last. They’re built to fail and be replaced so that the company can make more money. It’s called planned obsolescence.
      But there are some products that are built to last. They’re more expensive up front, but they save you money in the long run. Kinda like buying things in bulk does.
      Voyager was built to last. Comparing its lengthy functionality to your phone’s planned obsolescence is, well, kinda silly.

  • @HistoryGarden
    @HistoryGarden Рік тому +186

    Only 300 years to the Oort Cloud, at 540 million kilometers per year. Just the solar system is so much more vast than we can really comprehend

    • @Swavvy116Xrs
      @Swavvy116Xrs Рік тому +24

      & that is just our solar system... now imagine the galaxy!! 🤯

    • @Quickened1
      @Quickened1 Рік тому +23

      After thousands of years, the closest star to it, besides our own, will still be 4 light years away...
      That's just one star among billions in our Galaxy alone, and space, is mostly empty...

    • @pauls5745
      @pauls5745 Рік тому +9

      yeah how immense,, i was amazed also at how fast it actually is going . that's about 61,000 kmh!

    • @maxonite
      @maxonite Рік тому +6

      @@ArtThouGardener that is unbelievable… and people think we’ll reach other stars…

    • @paulbenedict1289
      @paulbenedict1289 Рік тому

      They're not gonna get that far.
      In a few centuries someone will track them, catch them, bring back to earth and sell for obscene amount of money.

  • @MediumDSpeaks
    @MediumDSpeaks Рік тому +11

    I found you guys under 10k subscribers. blown away in such Short time you've blasted past 1m like voyagers 1&2 past the solar system! i expected 100k+ but this is truly inspiring. You deserve it I just had little faith in enough people online being on your level of intellect and artistry combined. So happily proven well wrong congrats @!!!!!

  • @alals6794
    @alals6794 3 місяці тому +4

    The only reason these probes have lasted as long as they have, circa 2024, is because they were not built on the basis of the profit motive. Whereas now, we had 2 private companies sending landers to the one where the first ended before even getting there and the second, Odysseus, landed on its side, blocking its main solar panel such that minimal data was gathered from the lander. And it only managed to land at all because of a secondary system built by NASA, not a private company.....
    It was later learned that it landed on its side because of cost cutting measures by the private company....haha

    • @Marvinglep
      @Marvinglep 4 дні тому

      Yawn...Cool story bro...

  • @Jobutron1
    @Jobutron1 Рік тому +819

    To imagine those are floating and still operating so deep in space is just, simply wondrous and makes the imagination run wild

    • @TheCoryGroshek
      @TheCoryGroshek Рік тому +55

      Yet my WiFi stops working if I go into my front drive way.

    • @sydneyhardial2669
      @sydneyhardial2669 Рік тому +6

      My WiFi doesn't work. Can't pay, I am skint.

    • @user-cg7tl
      @user-cg7tl Рік тому +2

      It's science fiction. Don't believe what you hear from the internet, youtube, and NASA which is more of a fraud than youtube.

    • @Soken50
      @Soken50 Рік тому +7

      @@TheCoryGroshek Maybe try plugging it into an RTG and a 3.7m wide antenna.

    • @DescendDab
      @DescendDab Рік тому +2

      @@TheCoryGroshek you could build a bootleg antenna using foil and a bowl, it might help and is fun to do if you are bored

  • @JD3Gamer
    @JD3Gamer Рік тому +427

    IMO the Voyager missions are the most important missions that NASA has conducted. At least outside of practical things like weather tracking, solar storm tracking, asteroid tracking, etc.

    • @mattsmith5421
      @mattsmith5421 Рік тому +18

      Lucky the engineers went behind the planners backs then

    • @jaybee9269
      @jaybee9269 Рік тому +1

      @@mattsmith5421 >> I don’t know that story but…somehow…I don’t doubt it.

    • @mattsmith5421
      @mattsmith5421 Рік тому +5

      @@jaybee9269 if you're interested to find out the channel is homemade documentaries, the voyager missions remastered. It was posted 4 weeks ago. Definitely worth the 2hrs 45mins

    • @neddyladdy
      @neddyladdy Рік тому

      They are the most important missions ever, if other more important missions, are ignored. wow, brilliant !

    • @williamyoung9401
      @williamyoung9401 Рік тому +3

      Until the James Webb. ;-) We're FINALLY going to see the first remnants of the Big Bang!

  • @MrVikingsandra
    @MrVikingsandra Рік тому +10

    I love the Voyagers so much! I loved this video thank you. I wish they could keep communicating with us...oh, the stuff they will see on their endless journey!

    • @TheNoiseySpectator
      @TheNoiseySpectator Рік тому

      I wish there had been more of their model deployed to outer space. 😏

  • @Enjoy_my_1st_Amendment
    @Enjoy_my_1st_Amendment 13 днів тому

    Somebody should interview these builders and mission staff.
    Of what they thought would be and what actually has been.
    Kinda impressive feet for all of us really. These special people have contributed alot for all of humanity.

  • @swensdawg
    @swensdawg Рік тому +233

    My dad was one of the engineers that got to work on some of this stuff, he also did some of the mars rover stuff. It's a lot of planning, a lot of calculating, and a lot of testing, but the results are awesome.

    • @PrestOGveeh
      @PrestOGveeh Рік тому

      kto zaputave

    • @darklegionnaire8304
      @darklegionnaire8304 Рік тому

      they sent up two decaying nuclear reactors and we think anyone else would find that peacefull???? decaying nuclear matter maybe our first contact. isnt that disgusting

    • @hummervs3278
      @hummervs3278 Рік тому +5

      And imagine this:
      They added the information about type of creature we are, the gold disk stuff. What if it actually goes near a creature that sees it, and can go capture it without destroying it. They would be a far more advanced group than we are today- we couldn’t detect it then react in time to catch it if going right past us.
      If they could research it and figure out the path it took from us to them -they would think we sent it specially to them on purpose. They would think we knew about them and sent it on purpose specifically to them. They would assume we are way more advanced than we are.
      As to the decaying nuke- nah. Thats not good for us but might be chocolate to them.
      A piece of aluminum has potential to be toxic to some unknown critter.

    • @robertsaca3512
      @robertsaca3512 Рік тому +1

      They would think this and that. What a reach.

    • @hummervs3278
      @hummervs3278 Рік тому

      @@robertsaca3512 Speculation, Half the fun!
      Have you no imagination to ponder: what if?

  • @Parabellumjohn215
    @Parabellumjohn215 Рік тому +713

    My mom was an intern at GE when they were building Voyager 1 & 2, she handled procurement and ordered many things like the RTG generator that are used to power them
    Proud of her small contribution

    • @skunktheshrink
      @skunktheshrink Рік тому

      When will the brainwashed public realize that the real motive for such government projects is to funnel taxpayer dollars into the pockets of billionaires.

    • @mearlytheadministrator9562
      @mearlytheadministrator9562 Рік тому +54

      Her contribution doesn't sound small at all

    • @thewaywardgrape3838
      @thewaywardgrape3838 Рік тому +9

      That's darn cool man!

    • @dannysankyu
      @dannysankyu Рік тому

      @Repent and believe in Jesus Christ stfu. i’m Christian but absolutely nobody is gonna turn to Christianity or repent when you’re constantly advertising it like it’s a new cereal. it’s just gonna make people who aren’t religious hate religion even more.

    • @canonwillette5580
      @canonwillette5580 Рік тому +12

      Ah, the GE in Schenectady, NY. My husband worked there designed the massive turbines.

  • @koiyujo1543
    @koiyujo1543 10 місяців тому +3

    these probes will no be forgotten they will forever be remembered for being one of the greater missions in history

  • @1DerangedWarrior
    @1DerangedWarrior Рік тому +1

    these were launched 2yrs before i was born. Launched in 77 I believe n im now almost 44.
    I've always been amazed that they have been up there that long & still transmitting my entire life.

  • @darlingicarus
    @darlingicarus Рік тому +221

    man that ending made me tear up 🥺 I can't even begin to fathom the things these little probes will see long after us and our ancestors are gone. safe travels little machines!

    • @worfoz
      @worfoz Рік тому +18

      ...so emotional...
      "cold and lonely in the deep dark night"...

    • @berretta9mm158
      @berretta9mm158 Рік тому

      They won't see anything: they will be fuelless, dead machines, speeding through space like all other Interstellar objects - like Ouamuamua. It makes you wonder...

    • @fungaltoe3748
      @fungaltoe3748 Рік тому +16

      imagine the probe reaches some alien civilization millions of years after humans have gone extinct. it makes me feel insignificant to think about

    • @Zelphyn
      @Zelphyn Рік тому

      30,000 years just to exit our solar system. They have a veeeery long journey ahead of them.

    • @Johninadelaide2022
      @Johninadelaide2022 Рік тому

      or get shot as junk by Klingons haha

  • @shanekral2650
    @shanekral2650 Рік тому +153

    I remember as a small child when these Space Travelers launched, my Papa was all tears and in awe. He explained to me how important these craft were to us and how proud he was to be alive to see us able to explore beyond Mars. He has passed and no longer with us, but likely has more info where he is now. I picture him always along their side for the interstellar journey.
    Thank you for the great video.

    • @xxpatrick204xx
      @xxpatrick204xx Рік тому +5

      Bill Nye the Actor Guy told me your dad was just a bunch of water and carbon. Hail Moloch!

    • @ahmed4363
      @ahmed4363 Рік тому +1

      Everytime i read a comment like this, i tear up.

    • @natmanprime4295
      @natmanprime4295 Рік тому

      @@xxpatrick204xx lol

    • @shubhamkumar6689
      @shubhamkumar6689 Рік тому +2

      We need more parents like your father in this world.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Рік тому +1

      @@xxpatrick204xx You mean Bill Nye the Science Guy. Bill Nighy the Actor Guy doesn't do astronomy.

  • @mattychaz4223
    @mattychaz4223 Рік тому +8

    I love how he makes machines feel like they are alive in his videos.

  • @mrscootervids
    @mrscootervids Рік тому +64

    Its actually so unbelievable its strange. The fact that both made it so we could solidify statistics and use both to verify information is a credit to the human race. Long live the Voyagers

  • @More-Space-In-Ear
    @More-Space-In-Ear Рік тому +107

    Though I had an interest in space (looking up at night with wonder) it was the voyager programme that made my interest grow, and being a 15 year old gave me a chance to learn as I grew up. Now 60 my interest has gathered a library of knowledge, and yes, I still look up

    • @soumyaripan5131
      @soumyaripan5131 Рік тому +3

      It's such a blessing to feel we are part something so amazing and we can appreciate the astounding creation and wonder about the creator

    • @More-Space-In-Ear
      @More-Space-In-Ear Рік тому +2

      @@soumyaripan5131 I'm looking forward to SpaceX's next venture, another peice of history to add to my long list.

  • @lizzykay9912
    @lizzykay9912 Рік тому +398

    It's kind of magical that even if we as a species manage to end ourselves that there would still be a testament to humanity and the Earth going out there. I thank the wonderful scientists, engineers and everyone who were involved in the making of those probes. Go, Go Voyager 1 & 2!

    • @TheBandit7613
      @TheBandit7613 Рік тому +23

      Veeger has information for the creator.

    • @user-cg7tl
      @user-cg7tl Рік тому +1

      Magical is the correct word. Just like magic doesn't exist, so do NASA fabrications that they use to do their money laundering.

    • @thalassaer4137
      @thalassaer4137 Рік тому +1

      @@TheBandit7613 no

    • @MrHouserobot
      @MrHouserobot Рік тому +17

      The question is, how many races already left such traces and where are they (the traces)

    • @krashd
      @krashd Рік тому +7

      @@MrHouserobot Drifting in space just like Voyager 1 and 2 will likely forever do.

  • @teresahatfield4521
    @teresahatfield4521 Рік тому +1

    The Voyager1and Voyager 2 are such impressive pieces of equipment our engineers and others at NASA and others worked on. So wonderful and impressive. Such great work they did. Very great work! Such wonderful information they will give us. So useful.

  • @scpguy1381
    @scpguy1381 3 місяці тому +1

    The Voyager probes were originally designed for only 5 years but by the time of launch, that lifespan had been expanded, and was expected to work for much longer

  • @IvanRodriguez-kl2hz
    @IvanRodriguez-kl2hz Рік тому +657

    Imagine one day in the future, if or when we achieve intersteller travel, someone finds and recovers the two Voyagers somewhere in the void. It'd be like the mother of all time capsules.

    • @db7610
      @db7610 Рік тому +46

      Kinda like the discovery of The Dead Sea Scrolls

    • @elite6657
      @elite6657 Рік тому +34

      And they would be worth BILLIONS they are priceless history

    • @jameskelly3745
      @jameskelly3745 Рік тому +11

      @@db7610 more like finding evidence of dinosaurs and finding out about how old this Earth is that's what's amazing.

    • @pws3rd170
      @pws3rd170 Рік тому +18

      Imagine if we achieved interstellar travel in say 200 years, and sent something to chase down one of the probes, it would have to go like 10 times the speed just to catch up in a reasonable amount of time. But then I’m not sure if it would even be possible to control velocity without an atmosphere so you couldn’t exactly slow down to interact with the probe

    • @GamingAppleTheFirst
      @GamingAppleTheFirst Рік тому +11

      @@pws3rd170 reverse thrusters

  • @daniellocke4172
    @daniellocke4172 Рік тому +74

    I simply want to say thank you. My 7 yo son watched this whole video with me doing nothing but asking questions. Very good job. Engaging my son is hard. Great video and amazing topics.

    • @williamdavis8035
      @williamdavis8035 Рік тому +8

      You're a good dad

    • @PoopaChallupa
      @PoopaChallupa Рік тому

      Did you inform your son that the oort cloud is only a hypothesis and not proven to exist?

    • @daphenomenalz4100
      @daphenomenalz4100 Рік тому +3

      @@PoopaChallupa it does, there are literal proofs lol

  • @cephasmartin8593
    @cephasmartin8593 Рік тому +2

    I didn't remember that it's been that long. I'm 73 and I remember when they were launched, seems like just a couple of years.

  • @ForsythJC
    @ForsythJC Рік тому +2

    Video: "Voyager 1 & 2 detected something beyond the edge of our solar system."
    Me (a Destiny 2 geek): "Let me guess, pyramid ships? Savathun DID warn us that the Witness is coming. Hide the Traveler, ya'll!"
    XD

  • @GrouchyRaccoon
    @GrouchyRaccoon Рік тому +672

    Imagine, tens of thousands of years into the future, being part of some alien civilisation discovering a long dead probe entering their own star system. It could be their first indication of any other life existing in the Universe.

    • @poison4303
      @poison4303 Рік тому +38

      What’s great too is the stuff we have on those probes that represents us to foreign life :0

    • @youtubenightcrawler9571
      @youtubenightcrawler9571 Рік тому +180

      Then the government of that cilivization covers it up and buries it. lol

    • @tomlxyz
      @tomlxyz Рік тому +36

      That would require some extremely sophisticated detection system since it's such a tiny object in such a vast space and still would need to be identified as being different from other vast number of things flying around

    • @Tinmann_77
      @Tinmann_77 Рік тому +57

      Or it crashes in a ranchers field in a scraggly desert state, and the government covers it up.

    • @SussedRage
      @SussedRage Рік тому +7

      @@tomlxyz yeah I wonder how many have flown near us lol

  • @kylewood2715
    @kylewood2715 Рік тому +202

    Is it strange that I feel sad thinking of these two amazing machines "going dark"?

    • @semaj_5022
      @semaj_5022 Рік тому +16

      I almost cried when when the Opportunity rover finally reached its end, so to me its not strange at all. This will be the end of an era. Finally closing the chapter on nearly a half century of science and understanding brought by these two wonderful machines and the innovations that built them. But were entering a new era of space exploration and discovery at the same time. The JWST era, you could say. So it's not all sad.

    • @jessicaowen5720
      @jessicaowen5720 Рік тому

      Reach out to splinthack

    • @jessicaowen5720
      @jessicaowen5720 Рік тому

      For help to recover your money

    • @jessicaowen5720
      @jessicaowen5720 Рік тому

      On ig#

    • @jessicaowen5720
      @jessicaowen5720 Рік тому

      SPLINTHACK

  • @NorrinRaddNorrinRadd
    @NorrinRaddNorrinRadd Рік тому

    To anyone who is looking at the comments before paying attention to the video and audio, then stop reading, and start watching and listening, because…..
    This is a brilliant video, with the best explanations of what is happening in it, that I have come across on YT, and on top of that, the commentator is speaking very clearly, with a voice that is easy on the ears……….
    So, between all of the information, and the ease of understanding what they’re saying, this has truly got to be one of the very best videos available on YT, and I am absolutely ecstatic that I have found this video and channel………….

  • @zargonfuture4046
    @zargonfuture4046 Рік тому

    A beautiful expression of what space and its mystery is.. Thank you, it was very moving....

  • @theminisimmer
    @theminisimmer Рік тому +123

    I'm a long time Star Trek fan, and my favourite Star Trek series would be "Voyager". It's about a starship that had an original mission of 5 years, but encountered an alien species that had managed to take the ship into the deep reaches of the galaxy. The journey turned from 5 years into a potential 80, and now I understand why the ship is called Voyager

    • @RhumRunner41
      @RhumRunner41 Рік тому +16

      V-ger

    • @josephwang267
      @josephwang267 Рік тому +9

      I remember being excited when "Voyager" was released. It was a bit dry for me, but fine as far as restarts go. "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan" is my favorite. Seeing Ricardo Montalban (Khan) reprise his original role from ST classic and duel William Shatner (Kirk) in their battle to the death with their huge respective egos and bravado was pretty epic.

    • @PhoenixLyon
      @PhoenixLyon Рік тому +3

      @@josephwang267 LOL
      You nailed it! ✌😸

    • @HO-bndk
      @HO-bndk Рік тому +6

      Don't the Klingons use one of the NASA Voyager probes for target practice in one of the movies?

    • @shanerountree3623
      @shanerountree3623 Рік тому +4

      @@HO-bndk I believe that was actually the Pioneer 10 probe and not one of the Voyager probes.

  • @ettenmoors1990
    @ettenmoors1990 Рік тому +141

    45 years and still in service… i wish our smartphones can last this long. :)

    • @dogwalker666
      @dogwalker666 Рік тому +25

      Difference is consumer electronics are designed to fail, We have machines that were built during the first world war still in full production, Yet our state of the art Machine made in South Africa that's only a year old breaks down almost every day.

    • @generaleerelativity9524
      @generaleerelativity9524 Рік тому

      Yeah, whatever uranium was used in those batteries I hope they have a stockpile of it somewhere and don't try to sell it to some foreign country _{cough, cough, Hillary, cough}_ 😧

    • @theincrediblehibby8239
      @theincrediblehibby8239 Рік тому +24

      @@dogwalker666 But of course; there's no money in longevity 😭

    • @dogwalker666
      @dogwalker666 Рік тому +1

      @@theincrediblehibby8239 exactly.

    • @ramboanime
      @ramboanime Рік тому +3

      Can't go wrong with Nokia

  • @careless3241
    @careless3241 Рік тому +2

    I was born in 85. Roughly 7 years after these things were launched. And I remember how limited and crappy technology was growing up... What surprises me more than anything is that these things still work at all

    • @washcloud
      @washcloud 9 місяців тому

      ..."things".....😨
      Okay bruh 🙃

  • @jclemmer49
    @jclemmer49 Місяць тому

    Hey, don’t let them get you down man. I’m 74 laying in bed with a broken back and I like listening to your music so keep it up. By the way, I think you’re funny. Take care.

  • @l.a.2646
    @l.a.2646 Рік тому +216

    All of the contractors who have their equipment on the probes should be extremely proud, example the electrical system, and the radio system! Those two items are the major reason these are still going. They were built with love and care and definitely overbuilt- stands testament to the engineers and craftsmanship of those folks. I hope the surprise us and keep on ticking! They are so far out that it takes even the radio signals hours to be received.

    • @blasterofmuppets4754
      @blasterofmuppets4754 Рік тому +20

      and today its really hard to get a washing machine that last for more than three years.

    • @l.a.2646
      @l.a.2646 Рік тому +6

      @@blasterofmuppets4754 true, most modern equipment is designed to fail in short time. ..

    • @ahambrahmasmi108
      @ahambrahmasmi108 Рік тому +13

      The lightbulb when first mass produced lasted forever. Then, because they started losing money due to low sales as a result of a long lasting product, they purposely put limits on their lifespan.

    • @kennypridemore5466
      @kennypridemore5466 Рік тому +2

      They forgot to send the record player along with the record !!!! ....Lol !!!! ..... what a bunch of nonsense .... humans won't exist by the time voyeur gets even HALFWAY to our NEAREST STAR ..... let alone outside our galaxy .... and its power will have been long gone way before then .... it will just be another tiny tiny tiny rock in the vastness of space , going nowhere quick .... lol

    • @Nero_Coniglio
      @Nero_Coniglio Рік тому +1

      @@kennypridemore5466 you don't think that a highly advanced space faring civilization could figure out how to build a device to play the records?

  • @alklazaris3741
    @alklazaris3741 Рік тому +169

    I'm honestly just satisfied that even if we are completely wiped out at the end of the sun's life we will still have a few probes telling the universe we existed.

    • @Johninadelaide2022
      @Johninadelaide2022 Рік тому +6

      That's millions of years...... Do you not think some humans will have left the Earth by then?

    • @alklazaris3741
      @alklazaris3741 Рік тому +25

      @@Johninadelaide2022 I'm very pessimistic about what humanity is capable of. Too much greed and entitlement gets in the way of progress. Even setting past and current issues aside we are still talking about sending a ship on a very very very long journey with enough time to spare to avoid the suns first nova ejection.
      Put in today's terms I see everyone arguing about when it will happen and why dump so much resources in alarmist behavior. Then one day to a sadly surprised civilization the sun takes the planet down.

    • @l0wr4n
      @l0wr4n Рік тому

      @@alklazaris3741 agreed, we'll nuke each other before we go inter planetary anyways. Sad but more likely

    • @chriskwakernaat2328
      @chriskwakernaat2328 Рік тому +3

      @@alklazaris3741 pretty much the movie dont look up..

    • @mikepatterson5349
      @mikepatterson5349 Рік тому +5

      Those probes have very little information on them compared to the vast quantity of knowledge projected through space from our radio waves that travel at a much faster rate.

  • @Jamie_Wulfyr
    @Jamie_Wulfyr 10 місяців тому +2

    Kind of embarrassing that we sent them a record instead of something more hi-tech but that was pretty much the best option considering what was available at the time. I can't see tape behaving well and retaining information for very long in space conditions. Maybe we should make another one with some digitally stored information onboard and keep sending them out everytime technological innovation makes the last model appear less than efficient.

  • @explorer1968
    @explorer1968 Рік тому +2

    One of the Voyager probes was included in the sci-fi movie Star Trek: The Motion Picture! From dreams, scientists have designed and built space probes that expand the reach of Science ever more!

  • @oevr37
    @oevr37 Рік тому +546

    The farthest picture ever taken of earth... (by human society). Very interesting that it takes so long for the voyager to get through the outer perimeters of our solar system. This means that if we'd ever live to see interstellar travel made possible, we'd probably easily catch up with the good old voyager, and maybe retrieve the old golden record to put it into a new faster voyager that will actually get somewhere in the next million years.

    • @gloriabeckley7464
      @gloriabeckley7464 Рік тому +37

      If we eventually meet a space faring species we are going to create systems of measurement we both can agree on.

    • @oevr37
      @oevr37 Рік тому +50

      @@gloriabeckley7464 I hope it won't be the imperial system :P

    • @StormTheSquid
      @StormTheSquid Рік тому +30

      @@oevr37 Watch the imperial system somehow have some sort of cosmic significance that we can't even imagine, like some specific constant is precisely 1 imperial foot, or precisely one pound, and we just don't know about it.

    • @LaurArt_UK
      @LaurArt_UK Рік тому +29

      @@StormTheSquid And some old alien saying, "Back in my day we used to measure in elbows! This newfangled imperial system is confusing."

    • @TURBOMIKEIFY
      @TURBOMIKEIFY Рік тому +2

      I believe they should be rid of the records, and use something that uses waves instead of an outdated mechanical thing even by our standards to communicate. Dunno what they could use. But a record ain't it for me, Chief.

  • @samratchattopadhyay3057
    @samratchattopadhyay3057 Рік тому +223

    Though we may not be able to travel to those light years far distances in our lifetime, but your videos help us travel virtually to those dark depths of the Universe. Thanks Astrum. 🙏🏻

    • @pauls5745
      @pauls5745 Рік тому +1

      greatest space achievement ever. I just think they are so far, they wont sent more out now. you couldn't catch up with them or even reach the edge again in 50+ years. they had the 2 best planets to slingshot from within easy reach

    • @DevlinSavini
      @DevlinSavini Рік тому +3

      It’s unlikely humans will ever travel beyond the solar system

    • @samratchattopadhyay3057
      @samratchattopadhyay3057 Рік тому +2

      @@DevlinSavini yeah...you are correct..even reaching Pluto will take decades....and the limit of the solar system extends upto the Oort clouds, which is light years across in length....so practically humans won't be able to go beyond the solar system...the only way to go there is to develop a supersonic Interstellar spacecraft.

    • @aaaaaa-hh8cq
      @aaaaaa-hh8cq Рік тому

      ❤️

    • @grahamgreenfield3765
      @grahamgreenfield3765 Рік тому +1

      THAT IS THE REASON ALIENS HAVE NOT VISITED US. It is beyond reasonable that other civilisations exist. Probably thousands in our galaxy. But distance means they will never come this far and we will never go that far to find them.

  • @kaygataki6163
    @kaygataki6163 Місяць тому

    Makes my day to day issues so small in comparison to the absolute vastness out there. I grew up with the Voyagers, thanks for this update.

  • @jasonrubik
    @jasonrubik Рік тому +1

    @astrum the Voyager Grand Tour to the Outer Solar System was conceived by Gary Flandro who was the 11th generation pupil of Euler (via Lagrange, Fourier, et al.) who then had a Canadian student at the Univ. of Tennessee, who become famous for making the first music video in space, Chris Hadfield.

  • @FriendlyKat
    @FriendlyKat Рік тому +41

    The voyagers are extremely important and fascinating.
    Did you know: In 1990, Voyager 1 turned around to face earth and took the famous, “Pale Blue Dot” photo, after which the camera was turned off to save power and because Voyager 1 is estimated to never pass another astronomical object ever again.
    The Golden Discs have math problems on them in case they’re ever recovered as math is thought to be a universal language. To think… If humans suddenly vanished, those discs would be the only proof we were real in space.
    I’m curious if we could get an updated version of Voyager 1 into space with tech similar to that of the newly released James Webb telescope?! Imagine how amazing that would be! It’s a shame these two amazing things will be dead soon. They’ve served humanity well!

    • @kirrimkerman8784
      @kirrimkerman8784 Рік тому +9

      The Golden Record isnt just a record of audio and visual stuff. But a record of our very existence.

    • @PutsOnSneakers
      @PutsOnSneakers Рік тому

      The only thing important is me the bible and your fear of death

    • @kirrimkerman8784
      @kirrimkerman8784 Рік тому

      @@PutsOnSneakers lol, nobody cares about you :P

    • @FriendlyKat
      @FriendlyKat Рік тому

      @@PutsOnSneakers Nobody asked. Not relevant. Keep your religion to yourself.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Рік тому +1

      There is already an updated Voyager, it's called New Horizons and it's been on it's way to Pluto since 2006.

  • @juni674
    @juni674 Рік тому +25

    I remember being a sophomore in High School when they launched. I just got my license and this was a big deal back then. Gas was 44 cents a gallon. What is weird is how these welcome mats will outlast our planet. Something to ponder how really small we are.

    • @snapmalloy5556
      @snapmalloy5556 Рік тому

      Same...I was entering my junior year in high school.
      The fact that they are still at work today is absolutely amazing

  • @cooterwallace
    @cooterwallace Місяць тому

    I was born on August 7th 1977. I have literally been watching these missions my entire life thanks to my dad.
    Thanks pop. I miss you.

  • @michaelandrew4812
    @michaelandrew4812 Рік тому +1

    The whole video is so insighful and amazing space is so vast and mysterious everything he said from 11:00 was so poetic and touching

  • @unclenogbad1509
    @unclenogbad1509 Рік тому +89

    I was fascinated by the possibilities of these missions when they were proposed and launched (the latter when I was 19). Feel privileged to have been able to follow them all this time, and see the data they've sent back. One of the greatest experiments humankind has ever undertaken.

  • @danieldevito6380
    @danieldevito6380 Рік тому +41

    How could someone NOT be absolutely fascinated by the universe? Studying the universe is as close to experiencing real magic as you can get. There is nothing more awe inspiring than space.

    • @berekexer8158
      @berekexer8158 Рік тому +1

      Nothing more useless lol. Humans will remain on earth and not interact in any meaningful way with space, not even the moon or mars.

    • @1stamendment999
      @1stamendment999 Рік тому

      Especially since Walt Disney had a lot to do with it

    • @danieldevito6380
      @danieldevito6380 Рік тому +10

      @@berekexer8158 Do you have any idea how many inventions and technologies came from traveling to space? Radar, MRI, GPS, super strong and light alloys, INCREDIBLY efficient insulators, incredibly strong and heat resistant ceramics, glass that can survive extremely pressures, near complete vacuum, cryogenic temps, intense heat, and extreme temp variations, the discovery of cold welding... The list goes on. Next time, maybe try researching before commenting on something you CLEARLY have no idea what you're talking about. Google and UA-cam are free.

    • @purplepaps3622
      @purplepaps3622 Рік тому +2

      To me it scary. I honestly hate knowing that life will end at some point, or the earth will be destroyed, or some shat.

    • @davidgalloway266
      @davidgalloway266 Рік тому +1

      @@danieldevito6380 damn right. Except radar was a product of British scientists in the 1930s. Otherwise you could easily double the size of your list.

  • @JacobAnawalt
    @JacobAnawalt 3 місяці тому +1

    “Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.”
    Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

  • @amazinggrace5692
    @amazinggrace5692 Рік тому

    Just proves that the simpler you make stuff the less likely it is to break. Or, they don’t make ‘em like they used to. Aug 1977 was the beginning of my sophomore year in college. Now I’m less than a year from social security. Safe travels VGR 1 and 2. 💕🐝💕🇺🇸

  • @gwgux
    @gwgux Рік тому +62

    Fascinating! I had no idea the probes were still active being that far out. That's mind blowing in of itself. The people who built those did an amazing job!

    • @roylovett4052
      @roylovett4052 Рік тому +4

      And here I am, can't get a signal anywhere in my house.

    • @Zelink108
      @Zelink108 Рік тому

      Or maybe the Universe is Electric, check out the Thunderbolts Project.

  • @samwalton4598
    @samwalton4598 Рік тому +27

    I was a freshman in highschool and lived in central FLorida when the Voyager probes were launched. There was quite a bit of media coverage in the local papers at the time. It is astounding that these probes are still relevant and providing valuable data. Very cool. I grew up watching the shuttle launches in the 70’s 80’s and 90’s from my front door. We are living in the golden age of space exploration, love your channel and keep up the excellent content. 👍

  • @pjimmbojimmbo1990
    @pjimmbojimmbo1990 Рік тому +2

    I was a Teenager when the Voyagers were launched, I am now a Pensioner. Those 2 Probes have been out there in unknown Space for more than my entire Career

    • @louk597
      @louk597 Рік тому

      i have an intresting question......how will alien life capture the voyagers thier going so fast ?

    • @pjimmbojimmbo1990
      @pjimmbojimmbo1990 Рік тому +1

      @@louk597
      All they have to do is get to the same speed and come along beside it, not really all that complicated

    • @louk597
      @louk597 Рік тому

      @@pjimmbojimmbo1990 i just thought with the size of space +the speed its going the chances would be nill then i started to google how would it be intercepted, its sad google couldnt/wouldnt give me a streight forward answer like yours thank you. hope you understand why i asked

  • @user-nl2gz7wt2o
    @user-nl2gz7wt2o 4 дні тому

    It's amazing how the Voyager's are still going 😮😮😮😮

  • @dlibby4979
    @dlibby4979 Рік тому +22

    I get a mix of emotions when I think of the ships. Drifting through space for hundreds of thousands of years on their own.

  • @bethica-anncontreras
    @bethica-anncontreras Рік тому +127

    I love how informative your videos are and I am still amazed that Voyager I & II are still collecting data after all these years. Thanks for making these great videos.

    • @8arrows
      @8arrows Рік тому +1

      I was born in 73. So much has been seen, learned, and discovered since I was born. The younger generations take for granted the thousands of images of the cosmos. But it wasn’t long ago, that the world was taught. That the Milky Way was the universe. I think about my great grandparents. Who thought every star was just a star. No one heard of galaxies, Let alone seen one. Then Hubble discovered that Andromeda was a galaxy far further out then our Milky Way. And what we were all seeing in the Milky Way, was just our Andromeda like galaxy. It was only 1979 when the world got to see Jupiter up close for the first time during the Voyager 1.
      The first clear colored image of Mars was 75, during Viking 1. The Mariner 4 did take the first close up photo of Mars in 65. But the black and white image was very defined.

  • @alexanderlevy158
    @alexanderlevy158 Рік тому

    Seeing the actual data waves from voyager 2 in the control room was so cool my eyes were popping outa my head.

  • @GermanShepherd1983
    @GermanShepherd1983 3 місяці тому +1

    The mission was always to include leaving the solar system and head for a different star system, that's why the gold record was included.

  • @bnk091182
    @bnk091182 Рік тому +112

    I was 14 when they launched. Didn't think much about it then although we talked about it in science class that year. But looking back, it now occurs to me just how invaluable this exploration proved to be. Great job, friends!

    • @timmack2415
      @timmack2415 Рік тому +9

      I was 13 and unimpressed. My focus was the girl in homeroom who sat next to me. LoL
      We are from the generation who saw the biggest technological breakthroughs in history.
      The girl from homeroom is long gone, but voyager is still amazing us all.

    • @nilsingvar7319
      @nilsingvar7319 Рік тому +6

      @@timmack2415 Well, only with perspective and experience could you reach the understanding of the magnitude of this advancement and breakthrough.
      Don't judge 13 year old Tim too hard ;)

    • @Zelink108
      @Zelink108 Рік тому

      Or maybe the Universe is Electric, check out the Thunderbolts Project.

  • @robertberahovich6747
    @robertberahovich6747 Рік тому +106

    Strange to think that these 2 probes might outlive humanity.

    • @midship_nc
      @midship_nc Рік тому

      There's no might about it, they will continue on forever while being slowly eroded/destroyed by micro meteors and dust over the course of a few millennia. Which is orders of magnitude longer than we will be here at the rate we are going lol.

    • @GalacticNovaOverlord
      @GalacticNovaOverlord Рік тому +19

      At the rate we're going, not strange at all lol

    • @anonymousfellow8879
      @anonymousfellow8879 Рік тому +5

      Maybe…until a fast and large enough rock hits them. It’s actually remarkable something hasn’t destroyed them yet

    • @thalassaer4137
      @thalassaer4137 Рік тому +2

      @@anonymousfellow8879 theyve got sensors position correctors,..micro meteors tho...well lets hope they got a good enough shielding

    • @robertthomas5906
      @robertthomas5906 Рік тому +2

      They'll be dead soon. The power source has been decaying all of these years. At some point soon they'll go dark forever.

  • @halweilbrenner9926
    @halweilbrenner9926 Рік тому

    Thid was a great imaginary journey of a real journey brought to life. Thank U!

  • @frazerg8303
    @frazerg8303 Рік тому

    Captured my imagination all those years ago and still does today. A magnificent achievement for personkind.

  • @TheBrowncoat2112
    @TheBrowncoat2112 Рік тому +16

    I remember when the first images were coming back from Urania’s and Neptune. There was such as sense of awe and wonder at things we had never seen before.

  • @chicobicalho5621
    @chicobicalho5621 Рік тому +225

    I was wondering, if New Horizons is traveling at a faster speed than the Voyagers, how many years would it take for NH to be farther away from Earth than the two Voyagers. Now, that's a space race!

    • @X3MgamePlays
      @X3MgamePlays Рік тому +30

      I wondered that too. It is a fact that this little guy already passed our moon, 9 hours after launch.
      However, due to missions. It slowed down and will never catch up.

    • @hrcnhntr613
      @hrcnhntr613 Рік тому +31

      The Voyagers are going at 16.9 and 15.3 km/s whereas New Horizons is going "only" 13.8 km/s. Additionally, New Horizons is under a slightly stronger gravitational pull so it will slow down at a faster rate than the Voyagers.

    • @TheAdministration
      @TheAdministration Рік тому +31

      In a nutshell, it won't, because of the the gravity assists they received from Jupiter and Saturn.

    • @1980999chris
      @1980999chris Рік тому +11

      Deep horizons has ion engines which are more efficient than the nuclear powered voyagers. I think if they sped up NH until it ran out of fuel it would eventually pass them.

    • @zqzj
      @zqzj Рік тому +3

      @@1980999chris you think or you know?

  • @SonoftheWars
    @SonoftheWars Рік тому

    This is a remarkable editorial. Outstanding.

  • @souraday1133
    @souraday1133 Рік тому

    Very well pointed out.
    That's the importance of forward-thinking design choices that are beyond the immediate requirement specified. No wonder, NASA has some of the smartest people of this "blue dot" inside our heliosphere ! 💖

  • @jaywa101
    @jaywa101 Рік тому +38

    Everytime I watch one of your videos I am struck by the quality, professionalism and sheer hard work you put into each one. Excellent voice-over, great production values and really accessible narrative is the proof of good research, writing and editing skills. Great work. Most informative. Very watchable. Well well done.

  • @MelliaBoomBot
    @MelliaBoomBot Рік тому +13

    Watching this with 48 hours to go until the James Webb Space Telescope unveils its first images...wow, what a beautiful earth we live on and the treasures to find!!

  • @BaseSRKI
    @BaseSRKI Рік тому

    Wonderful, this video was an amazing start of my day in a difficult time!

  • @chrissmith7655
    @chrissmith7655 3 місяці тому +1

    'What life on Earth is like,' HAHAHA, through Rose tinted glasses no doubt.

  • @fredrickseiler4492
    @fredrickseiler4492 Рік тому +55

    If humans master FTL travel, we'll catch up to the Voyager probes long before they go any real distance. Even if it takes us 100,000 years to develop it, the Voyager probes will still be relatively very close to Earth.

    • @bearcubdaycare
      @bearcubdaycare Рік тому +8

      No need to go even that fast to catch them up (or to travel to the stars even). Accelerate at 1g, and you'd catch them in good time...if headed the same direction.

    • @samrowe2889
      @samrowe2889 Рік тому

      Not going to happen and u know why so stop acting like its possible

    • @mdmoz1777
      @mdmoz1777 Рік тому +2

      @@nfamousfox6272 It can be done when we attain peace on Earth and goodwill to all.

    • @armwrestlingprofessor
      @armwrestlingprofessor Рік тому +1

      @@nfamousfox6272 physics dictates faster than light travel is impossible. It would require vast amounts of exotic matter with negative mass which requires energy of solar proportion or more

    • @chaoshavoc7235
      @chaoshavoc7235 Рік тому

      @@mdmoz1777 peace on earth will never happen.Unless we are all dead.And that has nothing to do with space travel.

  • @raverdeath100
    @raverdeath100 Рік тому +15

    also on the record - Dark was the Night by Blind Willie Johnson. he was born impoverished, blinded by his stepmother, died penniless and was buried in a now forgotten grave. a recording of his voice will live on forever and may outlive the world that treated him so cruelly.

    • @KoewlBag
      @KoewlBag Рік тому +2

      One of the best blues songs ever recorded too

  • @rogue3500
    @rogue3500 Рік тому

    This was a great report, thank you learned a lot

  • @hadleyscott1160
    @hadleyscott1160 Рік тому +2

    A true Star Trek. Live Long and Prosper everyone. Amazing Science.

  • @michaelwalsh8254
    @michaelwalsh8254 Рік тому +15

    I loved the Star Treck Movie that surrounded a damage Voyager called Veger. It had scorch marks over its name. It was a great movie which raised many questions, answered others and gave it an actual life beyond our last knowledge.

  • @sirarnie9837
    @sirarnie9837 Рік тому +219

    I think it is amazing that after being in space that long that they can still send communications. I know the Webb telescope has been in space for months and it already has been hit with at least 19 micrometeorites. So I'd imagine the Voyage spacecraft had to have been pretty dinged up after 45 years.

    • @deth3021
      @deth3021 Рік тому +53

      I think the problem with Webb is that it is close to the earth and moon, so it is in a more dense area.
      Where as the voyagers are going through much much less dense regions
      As such they likely hit a lot less debris.
      I may be wrong though.

    • @MrRizeAG
      @MrRizeAG Рік тому +28

      There's a lot more debris orbiting Earth than there is in open space.

    • @nologin5375
      @nologin5375 Рік тому +14

      @@deth3021 yes I believe this is correct, there isn’t a whole lot of debris in empty space that you’re likely to run into, it’s mostly around things with gravity like planets.

    • @deth3021
      @deth3021 Рік тому +5

      @@nologin5375 the I'm unclear about is, the voyagers did "close" passes on various planets so...

    • @nologin5375
      @nologin5375 Рік тому +8

      @@deth3021 to my knowledge they mostly just passed by planets, of course also getting the gravity assisted launches from them, the Webb telescope will be in orbit and thus, I imagine, more likely to run in to debris also be drawn in by gravity and debris that’s in orbit. Also the probes where like a couple meters wide and half a meter tall about and the Webb telescope is over 13 meters long and a few meters wide.

  • @SoylentGamer
    @SoylentGamer 6 місяців тому

    My belief regarding the lack of fluctuation due to solar activity is related to the bunching and bubbling of the electromagnetic waves having an impact on the charged particles.

  • @benfordrin6978
    @benfordrin6978 Рік тому +4

    Just imagine, if we some day in the future find a way to travel faster then light, we might be able to catch up and collect those two probes. That would be incredible

    • @avishekbiswas9443
      @avishekbiswas9443 Рік тому

      Travelling faster than light sounds impossible as it violates special theory relativity of sir Albert Einstein, but the probability is never 0. Few hundreds years after if we somehow discover any way to make spacecraft that can achive even 99.99% of speed of light. Our existence and intelligence will be worth it.

    • @benfordrin6978
      @benfordrin6978 Рік тому

      @@avishekbiswas9443 I was thinking about wormhole travelling, where you link two far away points by bending space. I think that might be more realistic or doable then actually lightspeed?

    • @idontagree9658
      @idontagree9658 Рік тому

      On a eons time line, why would it require greater than speed of light, when neither probe is traveling at speed of light?
      A more efficient and advanced hare cant catch 2 - 1970s tortoises? Too long a ROI for a human ...race? 😉

  • @yahccs1
    @yahccs1 Рік тому +38

    Fascinating!
    I'm glad you use 'astronomical units per year' which makes more sense considering the scale of the solar system (than using km or miles or fractions of a light year!)
    I wonder how far away the Pioneer probes are now - even though they lost contact, perhaps someone still has their trajectories calculated. I wonder also if New Horizons will find anything else out there before contact is lost with it.
    A 1980s programme series "Planets" based on the Voyager mission were a major part in me getting into astronomy when I was at school.

  • @garyfilmer382
    @garyfilmer382 Рік тому +7

    The Voyager probes are amazing, I remember them being launched, such a remarkable technological achievement for the 1970´s, and ‘the pale blue dot’ photograph has since become world famous.

  • @Pops1970
    @Pops1970 3 місяці тому +4

    I'll bet the majority of models are incorrect

  • @fzbio1
    @fzbio1 5 місяців тому +3

    in 45 years we havent even traveled a light day. think about that

  • @franciscooctavius5957
    @franciscooctavius5957 Рік тому +29

    What is simply amazing is our little star can affect space so far beyond its physical realm. Absolutely amazing how big the universe is. I only hope we figure out how to traverse it some day. These probes really should make you appreciate this planet and what it has to offer us. Enjoy!

    • @jfo3000
      @jfo3000 Рік тому +2

      Check out Thunderbolts Project here on youtube. Theory that is likely correct that all stars are node points in an electromagnetic field. As such are all connected.

    • @L1ghtOn3
      @L1ghtOn3 Рік тому

      Well if you think about it we can see all those stars up there so "Technically" you are connected to them! Now that is Mind Boggling! ✌🏼

    • @L1ghtOn3
      @L1ghtOn3 Рік тому

      @@jfo3000 I will have a look I think this might be the case. I don't think we fully understand the stars and space as much as we "think" we do. Peace ✌🏼

    • @jfo3000
      @jfo3000 Рік тому

      @@L1ghtOn3 Look up lectures by Walt Thornhill. He discusses the electric universe in depth and eschews a purely mechanical model of the universe that is not at all effected by electromagnetic fields. It makes total sense, but mainstream science cannot rock that far at this point.

    • @L1ghtOn3
      @L1ghtOn3 Рік тому

      @@jfo3000 Yeah was watching some last night thanks, seen some of this kinda work a few years ago and the vortex theory is interesting, ever since reading Ohaspe because if life experiences it helped me. Thankyou my friend, yes mainstream science is being drip fed I noticed that at Uni many years ago. Respect ✌🏼

  • @Silenciobob
    @Silenciobob Рік тому +3

    The numbers and distances I hear when talking about space are so staggering amazing and frightening all at the same time! Really makes
    You think

  • @thecooljohn100
    @thecooljohn100 Рік тому

    The amount of genius poured into these machines is astounding. This is why we must respect and put our scientists on pedestals. It seems like more and more we take scientists less and less seriously. This shows how broken and confused our society truly is that we stray further and further from our beacons of the only truths we know delivered to us by these scientists. Everything else in our lives is messy, but numbers never lie. The work these scientists and astronomers do is crucial to our understanding of the universe, why we are here, how it is that we are here, and if we are truly alone in this harsh world.

  • @Midwestmama612
    @Midwestmama612 Рік тому

    Love this video and kind of content. Reading the feel good comments, I see this content brings nostalgia, different generations coming together, our imaginations running wild,, and no divide. We're all soo small here on earth in comparison to what's out in space that's yet to be explored vs the filth on most socials and comments sections 😂

  • @MuscleBandit
    @MuscleBandit Рік тому +20

    Great video.
    The voyager missions are fascinating, especially when mini documentaries like this are made so well. I also found it very relaxing as well as digestible in layman's terms.
    Thanks 👍

  • @ComaDave
    @ComaDave Рік тому +40

    It was around the time of V2's Neptune encounter that Carl Sagan stated that the total combined energy of the transmissions from both probes received on Earth was less than one quadrillionth of a Watt, or less than the energy released by a snowflake hitting the ground.

    • @lizzykay9912
      @lizzykay9912 Рік тому +7

      That's a bit tragic, space is so immense that it's hard for us water fleas to experience it. Lol.

    • @sydneyhardial2669
      @sydneyhardial2669 Рік тому +1

      Pond life lizzy kay.

    • @r.a.6459
      @r.a.6459 Рік тому

      The power received decreases as _square_ of distance. That is, if the probes are now 10 times further away from where it were, the power now drops by a factor of 100.

  • @craftywitch
    @craftywitch Рік тому

    I just want to say that I love this video, thank you for making it

  • @meridien52681
    @meridien52681 Рік тому

    Entire careers have started and concluded within observation and analysis of data from the Voyagers! Incredible.