Nasa’s Voyager-1 sends usable data from deep space | BBC News

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BBC News

BBC News

Ай бұрын

The US space agency says its Voyager-1 probe is once again sending usable information back to Earth after months of spouting gibberish.
The Nasa spacecraft is humanity's most distant object, being more than 24 billion km (15 billion miles) away.
A computer fault stopped it returning readable data in November but engineers have now fixed this.
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Пікірлер: 2 400
@brianbks02
@brianbks02 Ай бұрын
Voyager 1: "I GOT ONE MORE IN ME"
@wookie-zh7go
@wookie-zh7go Ай бұрын
"I didn't hear no bell"
@dom4591
@dom4591 Ай бұрын
I'm not leaving!
@FighterFlash
@FighterFlash 29 күн бұрын
Ah Vygr live long and learn
@ricyman5110
@ricyman5110 29 күн бұрын
they jailed the cameraman from fox 7 too😂😂😂. AIPACmake american Communis is real😂
@db5094
@db5094 29 күн бұрын
@@ricyman5110 tf are you talking about this is about a space probe
@JDBD13
@JDBD13 Ай бұрын
To be fair to Voyager 1, I'm not even 30 yet and I barely function.
@gustavgnoettgen
@gustavgnoettgen Ай бұрын
Anymore
@eamonahern7495
@eamonahern7495 Ай бұрын
I'm 48, so a little bit older than voyager, and some of my hardware doesn't function either. For instance, as of a little over 5 years ago, I no longer have a functional pancreas.
@janparchanski9242
@janparchanski9242 Ай бұрын
@eamonahern7495 Why?
@eamonahern7495
@eamonahern7495 Ай бұрын
@@janparchanski9242 because of a glitch in my immune system
@pawsnpistons
@pawsnpistons Ай бұрын
But you didnt cost millions and millions of dollars to be made and maintained...
@Manskilz
@Manskilz Ай бұрын
Voyager. The Nokia phone of probes.
@sixstanger00
@sixstanger00 29 күн бұрын
Maybe that's why aliens haven't visited. They think, 'Damn if their PROBES are built like this..."
@Defirence
@Defirence 28 күн бұрын
@@sixstanger00 lmao good one
@user-qw1pz4xh2i
@user-qw1pz4xh2i 27 күн бұрын
You sir are the Human of Microbes 🦠
@agagab1280
@agagab1280 25 күн бұрын
​@@user-qw1pz4xh2ieh
@technicianbis5250-ig1zd
@technicianbis5250-ig1zd 16 күн бұрын
Nar, Motorola brick, you could drop it in water and it would still work. I finally bought a Motorola smart phone and it is a great phone, has glass screen not plastic and still clear despite dropping it several times.
@envitech02
@envitech02 Ай бұрын
I'm glad they built it in the 70s, otherwise programmers had to click skip ad every they need to talk to Voyager.
@user-lv7ph7hs7l
@user-lv7ph7hs7l Ай бұрын
Interstellar spacecraft have premium subscriptions.
@AlfaGiuliaQV
@AlfaGiuliaQV Ай бұрын
@@user-lv7ph7hs7l But you´ll still be charged 9.99 to unlock all of the data.
@LuKiSCraft
@LuKiSCraft Ай бұрын
@@user-lv7ph7hs7l One day baby, one day
@littleman787
@littleman787 28 күн бұрын
@@user-lv7ph7hs7l Interstellar spacecraft now have Stories! Click here to learn more.
@CheckmateSurvivor
@CheckmateSurvivor 28 күн бұрын
Ha ha ha!
@RealUlrichLeland
@RealUlrichLeland Ай бұрын
The computer on voyager 1 has about 68 kB of memory. It's amazing that NASA can still do cutting edge science with a computer that's about as powerful as a talking birthday card, even while it's on the edge of the solar system. The software engineers for the voyager program must be some of the best in the world.
@samsmith2635
@samsmith2635 Ай бұрын
Its like your laptop talking to a simple calculator
@MrSimonw58
@MrSimonw58 Ай бұрын
68kb is a lot
@RickPeake01
@RickPeake01 Ай бұрын
Happy birthday 😂😂🎉
@dexterrity
@dexterrity Ай бұрын
​​​​@@MrSimonw58the irony of you posting your comment of about a dozen characters in length using a device with at least several GB of memory. That is, our current consumer devices might have about 6 orders of magnitude more memory than voyager. can we take a moment to appreciate a million times more memory than voyager (to play video games etc) is wild 🤯
@Dr.Kay_R
@Dr.Kay_R Ай бұрын
​@@MrSimonw58I can give a strong argument against this but don't wanna sound like a nerd. 😂 It's hard. Believe us. 😅
@romeshbhat8362
@romeshbhat8362 Ай бұрын
Billions of miles away and still sending signals And my bank's OTP has still not reached me
@smrfk
@smrfk Ай бұрын
Is it from SBI ?
@durgaprasad32154
@durgaprasad32154 Ай бұрын
😂 good one ☺️
@romeshbhat8362
@romeshbhat8362 Ай бұрын
😂😂😂​@@smrfk
@vincenzofranchelli2201
@vincenzofranchelli2201 Ай бұрын
the world if they got rid of OTP🌞
@Leahd_279
@Leahd_279 29 күн бұрын
😂This one got me
@splifsend
@splifsend Ай бұрын
45 years and it's almost 1 light day away - 65,000 years to get to Alpha at that speed
@Participant616
@Participant616 Ай бұрын
Mind boggling.
@YellowKurt
@YellowKurt Ай бұрын
1000 years from now they will make a device, that will reduce that time frame to 1 second
@rybobz
@rybobz Ай бұрын
We will likely create a new form of propulsion that allows us to catch up to voyager then we will bring it back and put it in a museum sadly none of us will see that day or it's incredibly likely we won't but I suppose never say never
@Jean-PierreGrenier-yl3wp
@Jean-PierreGrenier-yl3wp Ай бұрын
@@YellowKurt Speed of light is a constant cop on interstellar highway… Even at maximum light speed, Voyager 1 would take 4 years to reach to Proxima - our nearest neighbouring star. But I get what you mean: we may find ways to built a device that will zoom past Voyager 1 to reach destination before it.
@user-ts6lv8qr4p
@user-ts6lv8qr4p Ай бұрын
Let's hope humans will not destroy the civilization in the next 100 years first​@@YellowKurt
@yeahboyiiiii222
@yeahboyiiiii222 Ай бұрын
In 2021 NASA put out a job application for someone who could program in Fortran 5. Some un named person took the job and here we are, they got a spacecraft from the 70's working again from 15 Billion miles away. Bravo un named hero.
@Space-Audio
@Space-Audio Ай бұрын
Oh, I assure you that FORTRAN IV was for ground data systems, most of which were long ago "updated" to Sun/SPARC/Solaris platforms (FORTRAN 77). Onboard is purely assembly for the custom processors.
@noobscoopsies1100
@noobscoopsies1100 Ай бұрын
I also read the same thing in other video but for assembly coding language.
@yeahboyiiiii222
@yeahboyiiiii222 Ай бұрын
@@Space-Audio So Voyerger is updated in ...... Fortran 5 ... they havent been doing system updates to java mate
@DerBingle1
@DerBingle1 Ай бұрын
I doubt it's written in Fortran. Probably it's BAL or direct machine language. They want every bit to count.
@itstoasty7089
@itstoasty7089 29 күн бұрын
They lying
@mosshark
@mosshark Ай бұрын
Incredible. This now interstellar spacecraft was built in the bloody 1970's!
@rustshoo5068
@rustshoo5068 Ай бұрын
Like the music back then, the chirps are coming back, melodiously, crystal clear.
@Chromastellia
@Chromastellia Ай бұрын
@ForbiddenPlanetB That is just so cool.
@CountScarlioni
@CountScarlioni Ай бұрын
@@rustshoo5068 It's really not what could _ever_ be described as crystal clear. I'd probably describe it more like a vanishing whisper in black static. The bitrate has dropped to around 0.16k/sec and the signal heard on Earth comes in at less than a trillionth of a watt in strength. At present only the largest dishes of the Deep Space Network are capable of catching the signal at all and even they frequently don't get all the data first time around due to it being broken up by the background static of the cosmos. Thankfully Voyager 1 constantly repeats its data. Voyager's transmissions also require digital processing to enhance the signal to noise ratio in order to make it useful. The technology to do that didn't even exist when Voyager was launched and its creators probably didn't expect the probe's signals to remain detectable in the 2020s.
@mbbb9244
@mbbb9244 Ай бұрын
@@CountScarlioniI live about 20km from one of these dishes. It sits in an empty field. There are signs on the footpaths saying “beware of snakes”. And inside there is a large screen which lists all the probes and missions they communicate with and what time of day. It even tells you what they are talking to at that very moment. Sometimes it’s the Mars Rovers and orbiters, but it could be Juno and Jupiter, or New Horizons and Pluto. 9pm tonight it will be talking to Voyager 2 - that’s 20.4 billion km away. It’s quite a bizarre feeling looking out the window at the 64m dish and knowing it’s talking to something outside our solar system…… Wish they did something about the snakes though.
@wicken8895
@wicken8895 Ай бұрын
What a great time to be alive !!!
@Donjuanthesecond
@Donjuanthesecond Ай бұрын
And my iPhones stops working every 4 years
@rossicourvosi218
@rossicourvosi218 Ай бұрын
That's intentional though
@BurtonHohman
@BurtonHohman Ай бұрын
Well if you paid 200 million dollars and made it the size of a small car I bet you could get your iPhone to last longer
@GreenStorm01
@GreenStorm01 Ай бұрын
Radioactive batteries man
@Gryzor88
@Gryzor88 Ай бұрын
Planned obsolescence.
@wildandbarefoot
@wildandbarefoot Ай бұрын
If it was made by apple it would have received a terminal update years ago.
@armyveteran101st
@armyveteran101st Ай бұрын
I was 9 years old when the Voyager 1 spacecraft was launched in 1977, and I remember being excited about it as a kid. I will turn 56 years old in three weeks, and it is unbelievable that the spacecraft is still going and working!
@spacelemur7955
@spacelemur7955 29 күн бұрын
Well, whippersnapper, I was in college when it launched, but also thought it was great.
@NAVEEN-ef4zd
@NAVEEN-ef4zd 29 күн бұрын
It's not working.. but the signal it have send years back have travelled all this year and reached now that's it...
@peamutbubber
@peamutbubber 27 күн бұрын
Happy birthday when it arrives!
@RipMinner
@RipMinner 9 күн бұрын
I was born in 1978 so I was -1 years old.
@shmookins
@shmookins Ай бұрын
From Nasa's website: "It will take about 300 years for Voyager 2 to reach the inner edge of the Oort Cloud and possibly about 30,000 years to fly beyond it. Voyager 2 is heading away from the Sun about 36 degrees out of the ecliptic plane (plane of the planets) to the south, toward the constellations of Sagittarius and Pavo. In about 40,000 years, Voyager 2 will be closer to another star than our own Sun, coming within about 1.7 light years of a star called Ross 248, a small star in the constellation of Andromeda."
@bwhog
@bwhog 29 күн бұрын
Which means that it technically isn't in interstellar space yet and won't be until it reaches the outer edge of the Oort cloud, which will happen in approximately a great many thousands of years after we'll all be dead.
@zikkicharade
@zikkicharade 29 күн бұрын
How a star from another galaxy is only 1 ly away😂
@db5094
@db5094 29 күн бұрын
@@zikkicharade You don't have good reading skills.... Read it again.
@mistertagnan
@mistertagnan 29 күн бұрын
@@bwhog it’s in the interstellar medium AFAIK, which counts as “interstellar space” as it is different from the interplanetary medium. But like you said, it hasn’t really left the solar system per-se
@bwhog
@bwhog 29 күн бұрын
@@mistertagnanHopefully we won't have to wait that long and, within 100 years, we'll simply be able to simply fly out and go get it and stick it in a museum. 😜
@lord_scrubington
@lord_scrubington Ай бұрын
"what on earth is it sending back" nothing from earth I should imagine
@NightElveee
@NightElveee Ай бұрын
Your moms shock waves data everytime she gets out of bed.
@fargoth391
@fargoth391 Ай бұрын
@@NightElveee HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAA THATS A REAL KNEE SLAPPER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! IM DYING OF LAUGHTER YOU'RE SO FUNNY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! AHAHAHAHAHAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHHAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHAAAHAAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHWAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
@Dr_Doctor_Lee
@Dr_Doctor_Lee Ай бұрын
@@fargoth391 best commend i have seen
@5655nasir
@5655nasir Ай бұрын
@@fargoth391never use these emojis again
@fanatamon
@fanatamon Ай бұрын
@@5655nasirever
@Machiavelli21st
@Machiavelli21st Ай бұрын
Voyager 1: sends alien signals NASA scientist: it's sending gibberish
@artofsam
@artofsam Ай бұрын
Just imagine that’s what it actually was this whole time that would be a great premise for a movie.
@Hobbes746
@Hobbes746 Ай бұрын
We know it wasn’t alien signals. The signal consisted of all zeroes, i.e. no data at all.
@artofsam
@artofsam Ай бұрын
@@Hobbes746 I see we have an expert on alien translation!
@interstellarbeatteller9306
@interstellarbeatteller9306 29 күн бұрын
I am an expert. Black holes are really cloaking devices. Aliens are just waiting for global warming to boil us off the Planet before they visit
@geoffmower8729
@geoffmower8729 29 күн бұрын
@@artofsam NANU NANU. 🖖🏻
@JTan74
@JTan74 Ай бұрын
V-ger trying to contact the creator. "So, where's it going?" "Where no one has gone before."
@szimultan00
@szimultan00 Ай бұрын
Live long and prosper!😉
@panaderofilms
@panaderofilms Ай бұрын
That was actually Voyager 6...which doesn't exist..
@swaggerfm9838
@swaggerfm9838 Ай бұрын
Yet lol ​@@panaderofilms
@eastofwarden
@eastofwarden Ай бұрын
It's just going lol
@Oxley016
@Oxley016 29 күн бұрын
@@eastofwarden currently everywhere it is going, nobody else has gone before....
@davemanone3661
@davemanone3661 Ай бұрын
This is the kind of thing that makes me angry with people that attack NASA and say it is a waste of money. "They do so many wonderful things, but sometime things don't go according to plan. Our space program is the best there is and worth every penny. Even when things go wrong there is a lot to learn!
@Jean-PierreGrenier-yl3wp
@Jean-PierreGrenier-yl3wp Ай бұрын
Yes, there is “waste” of money because not every scientific research leads to practical applications. BUT if you would STOP all scientific researches because statistically most of them do not bring improvements in our lives, then there would NEVER be any future improvement…. You can’t tell in advance which research will bring practical results. This is the part that these people complaining about “waste of money” do not understand. (And the fact that knowing more about our surroundings tell us more about ourselves too.)
@davemanone3661
@davemanone3661 Ай бұрын
@@Jean-PierreGrenier-yl3wp Well said!
@kenmoraes6843
@kenmoraes6843 Ай бұрын
NASA hides alot of information too. They know about UFO's and everytime it comes on camera they cut the feed "due to technical difficulties".
@JamesAllen-mv4bj
@JamesAllen-mv4bj 29 күн бұрын
we should spend that money on the military
@davemanone3661
@davemanone3661 29 күн бұрын
@@JamesAllen-mv4bj There is plenty of money to go around. We don't need uneducated morons like t-rump telling people that science is not important
@joji_okami
@joji_okami Ай бұрын
Your car's key fob has more memory than the computer on voyager 1. Imagine that. *edit: i learned that from the Astrum YT channel. shout-out!
@willieboy8798
@willieboy8798 Ай бұрын
waste of key fob or memory?????
@thesjkexperience
@thesjkexperience Ай бұрын
Apollo computers were silly small too. Those guys were truly amazing! 🎉🎉. Doing so much with so little.
@adorp
@adorp Ай бұрын
Well yes, but Voyager's memory has to withstand cosmic rays.
@espressomatic
@espressomatic Ай бұрын
Pretty sure a keyfob has no RAM. What it has is ROM. And a very small amount, smaller than 68kB. More like 4kB.
@joji_okami
@joji_okami Ай бұрын
@@espressomatici read that they range from 4kb to 100kb and some even have a few mbs
@Jussle364
@Jussle364 29 күн бұрын
Voyager 1: Golden record San-Ti: "Do Not Answer"
@starmaster191
@starmaster191 21 күн бұрын
I just finished episode 5 tonight.
@keithhudson6460
@keithhudson6460 Ай бұрын
NASA: We have a message from Voyager1 Voyager1: "YEAAAHHHHH BOIIII"
@Allan_aka_RocKITEman
@Allan_aka_RocKITEman 28 күн бұрын
🤭🤭🤭
@bokami3445
@bokami3445 Ай бұрын
For those who are interested, there is a documentary called "It's quieter in the Twilight" in which you get to meet some of the scientists and engineer's who are still working on the project and the decisions they have to make in order for Voyager 1 to continue on it's epic voyage to the stars. Highly recommended!
@ivanlawrence2
@ivanlawrence2 Ай бұрын
I love that the Dr's background has the new space telescope, dinosaurs, something about OCD, yoga skeleton, and a moose. Also, fixing a computer that has outlived it's creators and is also billions of miles a way is also cool.
@stuartslyper1479
@stuartslyper1479 Ай бұрын
Dr Jen Millard is great! You can hear more of her on the Awesome Astronomy podcast
@JaSon-wc4pn
@JaSon-wc4pn Ай бұрын
The plastic dino is made from Real Dino matter.
@FlitwickGE
@FlitwickGE 29 күн бұрын
Even Harry Potter books are there
@ColinRichardson
@ColinRichardson 29 күн бұрын
@@JaSon-wc4pn plastic is made from trees and other vegetation that was not broken down by bacteria. I believe most oil predates dinosaurs by a few hundred million years. And remember, The T-Rex was closer in time to us humans now, than they were to the Stegosaurus. So we are talking MASSIVE timeframes..
@persianpride1989
@persianpride1989 29 күн бұрын
Better than having a dildo!!!!
@seventeeen29
@seventeeen29 Ай бұрын
These guys took we'll fix it in prod to the next level
@djangbahevans1
@djangbahevans1 Ай бұрын
😂
@bakdiabderrahmane8009
@bakdiabderrahmane8009 Ай бұрын
the ultimate debugging in production engineering.
@Karuska22ps
@Karuska22ps Ай бұрын
Software engineering is not impressive
@N1ckZ
@N1ckZ 13 күн бұрын
​@@Karuska22pssounds like you are jealous you don't know anything about it.
@Karuska22ps
@Karuska22ps 13 күн бұрын
@@N1ckZ it's really not impressive. It's so mainstream now
@jimnorthland2903
@jimnorthland2903 29 күн бұрын
I was eighteen when Voyager-1 was launched in 1977. Now I'm sixty five.
@crazyaces4042
@crazyaces4042 29 күн бұрын
I was 16.. seems so surreal so many decades have gone by. I'm very proud of the Voyagers and glad they can at least get some contact with one of them.
@ketanovas
@ketanovas 28 күн бұрын
I was dead yet.
@DrHelloWorld30
@DrHelloWorld30 Ай бұрын
We need more news articles like this. Absolutely amazing.
@captainbuggernut9565
@captainbuggernut9565 Ай бұрын
Grandad knew some stuff, eh kids.
@Dr.Kay_R
@Dr.Kay_R Ай бұрын
We know more than them now. But yeah. Still cutting edge 😅
@wicken8895
@wicken8895 Ай бұрын
Yeah, and then forgot where he put it. 😂
@apple54345
@apple54345 Ай бұрын
tell me you're projecting your personal frustrations without telling me you're projecting your personal frustrations.
@YellowKurt
@YellowKurt Ай бұрын
There's nothing extraordinary about it. Just a compressor converting uranium decay and using a stupid dish to beam numbers to earth
@NoClue-rat
@NoClue-rat Ай бұрын
Legend has it grandad landed in a tincan on the moon
@lippydalips4537
@lippydalips4537 Ай бұрын
Did you try turning it off and on again🤪😂🤣
@killeryuan08
@killeryuan08 Ай бұрын
To be honest, they tried it once a few years ago to solve another problem.
@Trey4x4
@Trey4x4 Ай бұрын
Get out 😐👉
@pekka75
@pekka75 Ай бұрын
😂👍
@richardhart9204
@richardhart9204 Ай бұрын
The Russians tried that with the Phobos probe, and it didn't end well for them.
@emerbrkah
@emerbrkah Ай бұрын
@@Trey4x4 🤣😂
@alzeNL
@alzeNL Ай бұрын
what a brilliant interview - decent questions and answered without interruption. others at the BBC take note, this is how you conduct a science interview.
@playeryoshi252
@playeryoshi252 Ай бұрын
Wow! Its up and running again! Amazing work NASA!
@treelonmusk5723
@treelonmusk5723 Ай бұрын
The coders who still probably write in assembly i guess are doing a good job
@Ryan256
@Ryan256 Ай бұрын
Fortran 5
@Scottyd21UK
@Scottyd21UK 29 күн бұрын
That's what you call a job for life at this point 😂
@rbanerjee605
@rbanerjee605 Ай бұрын
Imagine if aliens went and fixed it for us lol
@MrBugfunk
@MrBugfunk Ай бұрын
happend in star trek 1
@user-yh6by9mg6l
@user-yh6by9mg6l Ай бұрын
Also sort of happened in Oblivion.
@Wtfisahandle344
@Wtfisahandle344 Ай бұрын
Which race of aliens?
@stevencramsie9172
@stevencramsie9172 Ай бұрын
@@Wtfisahandle344 hopefully not the Borg
@Blodhelm
@Blodhelm Ай бұрын
Talking about Vger.
@differenceispreadin
@differenceispreadin Ай бұрын
What a fantastic, clear, polite and friendly explanation. Great guest ✨
@laRoz67
@laRoz67 29 күн бұрын
Incredible. If you can, find the documentary The Farthest. A surprisingly touching film about these incredible craft. So glad they got it back online.
@davidioanhedges
@davidioanhedges Ай бұрын
The Voyager Golden Disks have more memory capacity than Voyager ...
@Livinghighandwise
@Livinghighandwise 29 күн бұрын
It's static memory. Not the same thing.
@Ismael-tv3dx
@Ismael-tv3dx 27 күн бұрын
@@Livinghighandwisestill
@divisiona3974
@divisiona3974 Ай бұрын
Just unbelievable.
@tubecated_development
@tubecated_development Ай бұрын
Some people think so. They are usually really knowledgeable people 😉 /s
@ptonpc
@ptonpc Ай бұрын
Good to hear Voyager is still alive. Kudos to the team.
@Kadag
@Kadag Ай бұрын
And, of course, cred for the genius who put the gold platter on there, Carl Sagan!
@dgtheone
@dgtheone Ай бұрын
Awesome!
@aiman9365
@aiman9365 29 күн бұрын
Taking 22 and a half hours to send a message and the same time to receive a message from something 15 billion miles away *IS FAST.* They say it's slow, but no... that's FAST.
@BlackFlagHeathen
@BlackFlagHeathen 26 күн бұрын
That’s probably close to the speed of light, honestly. Which would make sense for electromagnetic waves of data, which aren’t a tangible object.
@NOT.MI5.MI6.
@NOT.MI5.MI6. Ай бұрын
Brian cox saying something about it before about space travel and time travel etc I j just wondering if the probe if it had atomic clock on it and one on earth would they have different times on ? eg if they checked the time on voyager now and calculated the time of the signal to travel threw space would it be different times ?
@Hobbes746
@Hobbes746 Ай бұрын
Yes. The difference is small (less than a second, if I remember correctly).
@NOT.MI5.MI6.
@NOT.MI5.MI6. Ай бұрын
​@@Hobbes746 Thanks for your reply 😊
@MrKennyroger
@MrKennyroger 29 күн бұрын
The cameraman who went with voyager 1 and has been videoing it for years should receive a nobel price definitely cous he keeps getting beautiful shots of the probe...
@fett713akamandodragon5
@fett713akamandodragon5 Ай бұрын
Being of the same age, all I can say is, keep on chugging along there my friend!
@DiRtYLaWs2007
@DiRtYLaWs2007 Ай бұрын
Carl Sagan would be proud.
@lexruptor
@lexruptor Ай бұрын
Ah, Voy. Gotta love it.
@Alexander-eu8kl
@Alexander-eu8kl Ай бұрын
Great interview
@gavriloking5637
@gavriloking5637 Ай бұрын
If they built it today it would shut off in less than a month because you didn't renew your subscription and then in less than 10 years it would break. I mean it could be fixed but the repair price is about the cost of new model which apparently will be "better" and "last longer".
@interstellarbeatteller9306
@interstellarbeatteller9306 29 күн бұрын
It would then sell Voyagers data to the highest bidder
@MorganSeveret
@MorganSeveret Ай бұрын
V.ger is back! 😉
@vincent21212
@vincent21212 27 күн бұрын
that we can still ping the damn thing at all is mind blowing enough. This has been an astounding fact to me for over 20 years - Id never imagined that we'd still be able to track the thing at this point in time
@bloqk16
@bloqk16 27 күн бұрын
Acquaintances of mine can't seem to grasp the significance until I use this analogy: Imagine being able to see or detect a lit candle from 1K miles/1.61K km away.
@quantumradio
@quantumradio Ай бұрын
Very good explanation from the Dr. Thank you.
@myblueandme
@myblueandme Ай бұрын
Aliens? It's like an ant sending signals to an Elephant "look down".
@user-yy9hk9od9u
@user-yy9hk9od9u Ай бұрын
Unmanned mission: Already left the solar system. Manned mission: Haven't been back to the Moon in 56 years.
@Tuggerdrums
@Tuggerdrums Ай бұрын
Easier to replace dead computer rather than a dead person.
@anonymes2884
@anonymes2884 Ай бұрын
52 years (last human on the moon was during Apollo 17 in December 1972). (but yep, still not a great record)
@-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.-
@-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.- Ай бұрын
After someone dies on the moon, we'll never look at it the same way again.
@wattsmichaele
@wattsmichaele 29 күн бұрын
We never sent men onto the moon
@michelmilaneh8963
@michelmilaneh8963 29 күн бұрын
​@@wattsmichaelestfu the adults are talking
@OliverGrumitt
@OliverGrumitt 28 күн бұрын
It is a great tribute to the ingenuity of the engineers who designed Voyager that the craft is still working getting on for half a century after launch. It is certainly one of the greatest engineering achievements, ever.
@ShihTzuNinja
@ShihTzuNinja Ай бұрын
Shout out to the people who designed, built, launched, and continue to monitor this thing. Amazing feat for humanity.
@averyboringchannelmadebyar3649
@averyboringchannelmadebyar3649 Ай бұрын
apparently we now have 0.01% more chance of finding aliens
@nikr1d3r32
@nikr1d3r32 Ай бұрын
Oh you are too generous 😂 Edit: damn autocorrect
@roberts7961
@roberts7961 Ай бұрын
We already have them in the UK, Islamist's
@stevenmoore3480
@stevenmoore3480 Ай бұрын
@@roberts7961 "Islamist's" is that right, we also have a lot of native people are thick as shit, and they just as bad, I say kick you the fuck out and the UK will be golden.
@froufou100
@froufou100 Ай бұрын
What will they think of us?
@samsmith2635
@samsmith2635 Ай бұрын
a generous number lol
@exploretheobvious
@exploretheobvious Ай бұрын
“Reset button” comes to mind 😙
@CountScarlioni
@CountScarlioni Ай бұрын
Even in space, they sometimes have to turn things off and then back on again!
@espressomatic
@espressomatic Ай бұрын
Pretty cool. Insane to think of how far away VGER has traveled. And it's still not 1 Light-Day away.
@steveg2277
@steveg2277 29 күн бұрын
And still not even CLOSE to our nearest neighboring star. Let that sink in - and it’s moving at 18000 mph.
@mekorlang
@mekorlang 29 күн бұрын
It's has not even reached a distance of 1 light day yet
@petevan8942
@petevan8942 Ай бұрын
And they say man didn't land on the moon because we didn't have the technology...well 45 years on this old tech is still working wonders...we definitely had the tech to land on the moon.
@aykutlondon4784
@aykutlondon4784 Ай бұрын
That's the dumbest thing I've ever heard. Just because we could launch satellites into space, doesn't mean we could land humans onto the moon. The logistics of such a task is so immense and not even comparable to launching a satellite. Yet you have just compared it.
@abisaiamatalo2769
@abisaiamatalo2769 29 күн бұрын
they should now easily land man on the moon using modern tech and materials. Strange that no country is trying to do it.
@geoffmower8729
@geoffmower8729 29 күн бұрын
@@aykutlondon4784 Now that is the dumbest thing I've ever heard!
@aykutlondon4784
@aykutlondon4784 29 күн бұрын
@@geoffmower8729 how so? I explained why i said what I said. You didn't. That's the difference. I never actually said that we didn't land humans on the moon. I said there's a massive difference between launching a satellite into deep space and launching a rocket with people and a moon lander onboard and it successfully landing. Does your small IQ brain think those two things are logistically the same thing? Who knows what you think, because you haven't bothered to explain your comment.
@microscopic.caterpill
@microscopic.caterpill 29 күн бұрын
Black Bolt is on the moon, I wouldn’t go back neither
@kayskreed
@kayskreed Ай бұрын
Is there a sci-fi story where Voyager-1 and 2 are discovered by aliens and sent back to us? Or one where they are the last remnant of humanity in some distant future?
@johngwheeler
@johngwheeler Ай бұрын
several sci-fi stories have used the Voyager probes in their plot: one of the Star Trek movies from the 1980s comes to mind.
@cressmanfoster
@cressmanfoster Ай бұрын
That is the plot of the first Star Trek movie. Although the probe is called Voyager 6.
@marcd1981
@marcd1981 Ай бұрын
@@cressmanfoster V-GER, I remembered that as I read your comment. That would be a pretty awesome turn of events, an advanced race finding it and upgrading it to get back here.
@CountScarlioni
@CountScarlioni Ай бұрын
They've popped up in several scifi stories being encountered by aliens. The first Star Trek movie being the most notable example. However aliens will never find the Voyager probes. The real fate of Voyager 1 is to end up in the Smithsonian. In the coming centuries, nuclear propulsion technologies will make their way to space, and humans will rapidly establish manned and/or robotic outposts across the solar system using ships that accelerate at a constant 1G velocity. Such ships would be so fast that they would be able to journey out to Voyager 1's location in a few weeks. Some space-archaeologists will decide to have the Voyagers, and many other ancient space relics collected, brought back and put on museum pedestals.
@Space-Audio
@Space-Audio Ай бұрын
Just to rain on this parade: Both spacecraft are slowly being eroded away by high-velocity impacts with micron-sized (think smoke) dust. Our best measurements indicate about one such impact per hour which produces a tiny divot and a little plasma explosion we detect with the PWS instrument. If that rate were to persist, there wouldn't be much of anything left in several million years.
@huebdoo
@huebdoo Ай бұрын
it was launched in 1977 ... basically a dial up modem in basic programming and its still working is amazing in itself
@Wtfisahandle344
@Wtfisahandle344 Ай бұрын
Incredible
@eckeck1996
@eckeck1996 Ай бұрын
Gulp.. not sure if telling aliens where to look for us is such a great idea.
@nuntana2
@nuntana2 Ай бұрын
Wouldn't make a difference. They would already know our location through the decades' worth of the radio signals we've been chucking out, and if they're clever enough to make it to Voyager 1 or 2, one more light day to earth would be a blip.
@Space-Audio
@Space-Audio Ай бұрын
To be fair, the golden record was mostly for us Earthlings. If we're really really lucky, our technology will advance quickly enough to catch up with the Voyagers and return them to museums. Or, maybe, they'll be the most sought-after space salvage of all time. (I'll be passing trajectory data on to my progeny. ;-) )
@IZn0g0uDatAll
@IZn0g0uDatAll Ай бұрын
It will take Voyager 1 16700 years to reach Proxima the closest star from earth. And we are quite certain there are no aliens over there. So we are safe. Also, a fun fact is that scientists expect Voyager 1 to survive earth by at least a trillion years. So it might be one of the only trace of our existence for an incredibly long time.
@microscopic.caterpill
@microscopic.caterpill 29 күн бұрын
Right like Voyager baby you on your own. By time they come, I hope I’m light years decEASED.
@JasonPurkiss
@JasonPurkiss Ай бұрын
Makes you wonder why apple retires there laptops after 10 years, perhaps they should employ some NASA engineers 😂
@tubecated_development
@tubecated_development Ай бұрын
You really wonder? 🤑
@nickofzo
@nickofzo Ай бұрын
To make you buy new ones. Mercedes once almost went bankrupt because their cars wouldn't break down and no-one bought a new one because of that.
@alt8791
@alt8791 29 күн бұрын
Because spacecraft have dead-simple, potato-quality computers and longevity is the absolute biggest concern in mission design (because you can’t fix it).
@maxqproductions1
@maxqproductions1 Ай бұрын
Good stuff but one of your photos of the tracker equipment belongs to Ed Geiger with USLaunch Report.
@applepeel1662
@applepeel1662 29 күн бұрын
That's absolutely incredible
@brianharoldvidal2374
@brianharoldvidal2374 Ай бұрын
The San-Ti just made the repair works. Thanks to them...
@syntheticsandwich190
@syntheticsandwich190 Ай бұрын
Imagine voyager sends back: DO NOT ANSWER!!! DO NOT ANSWER!!! DO NOT ANSWER!!!
@causticchan4617
@causticchan4617 Ай бұрын
@@syntheticsandwich190 yo i got chills
@rootyroot
@rootyroot Ай бұрын
@@causticchan4617 You need to watch last stand (ai short film) exactly this happens!
@PiscatorLager
@PiscatorLager Ай бұрын
​@@syntheticsandwich190let's hope that this isn't received by a scientist who had lost all faith in humanity
@moonshoes11
@moonshoes11 Ай бұрын
They fixed the bugs? ;)
@BlackLotuses
@BlackLotuses Ай бұрын
22.5 hours to send data 15 billion miles away is actually something out of Star Trek or Star Wars 😅
@jessemazo4791
@jessemazo4791 Ай бұрын
i call bs do th math even at lightspeed!
@JohnRandomness105
@JohnRandomness105 Ай бұрын
In general, "Star Trek" and "Star Wars" had no sense of scale. (That's a problem with many science fiction writers.) 22.5 hours is just about right for that distance.
@user-lv7ph7hs7l
@user-lv7ph7hs7l Ай бұрын
​@@jessemazo4791 It's exactly 22.5 light-hours away.
@ketanovas
@ketanovas 28 күн бұрын
@@user-lv7ph7hs7l don't bother with flerfers
@jessemazo4791
@jessemazo4791 28 күн бұрын
@@user-lv7ph7hs7l the can talk 22 light hours away but cant give an expalnation why were banned form th lunar surface! i smell bullshit and you guys are goin gback for seconds!
@chicobicalho5621
@chicobicalho5621 29 күн бұрын
Voyager 1 is nothing short of a scientific miracle. I watched its launch as a teenager, "saw" it live on television as it left our solar system, and it still lives in my heart like a mechanical family member.
@CloneShockTrooper
@CloneShockTrooper Ай бұрын
Made me smile out of joy and relief.
@aerohk
@aerohk Ай бұрын
It's amazing we have people getting paid full time, running around to work on cool things without expectation of making a profit or any economic return.
@Space-Audio
@Space-Audio Ай бұрын
Science return, human knowledge return, is more than economic return.
@michaelrains64295
@michaelrains64295 29 күн бұрын
Not all progress is measured in dollars.
@wildandbarefoot
@wildandbarefoot Ай бұрын
Im very glad this has been fixed. I do think a Alien did the fix.
@thedman7305
@thedman7305 Ай бұрын
cuz u a bot
@alt8791
@alt8791 29 күн бұрын
Amazingly insulting to the team of extremely talented engineers who have dedicated most of their lives to keeping this spacecraft alive
@thedman7305
@thedman7305 29 күн бұрын
@@alt8791 well said
@eshanthak
@eshanthak Ай бұрын
Absolutely incredible!
@DjAmerillion
@DjAmerillion Ай бұрын
That is awesome that it is communicating again!
@Lords1997
@Lords1997 Ай бұрын
“After months of sending gibberish” Id like to believe an alien repaired Voyager for us :)
@DjHazardous
@DjHazardous Ай бұрын
*Never understood why there are no plans for Voyager 3 and 4 with modern tech*
@benjaminalston8884
@benjaminalston8884 Ай бұрын
Cos it’s all a lie my man
@inventor121
@inventor121 Ай бұрын
The voyagers relied on gravity assists from the outer planets based on certain alignments. Chances for another Grand Tour using similar planetary alignments won't happen until at least 2150. And by that point tech will have advanced significantly. The only other option is to burn way more fuel than anything else before and that's just not feasible.
@CDee-if9og
@CDee-if9og Ай бұрын
They've chucked that out too with all the previous knowledge of the moon landings 😂 Just chucked in the bin.
@nic.h
@nic.h Ай бұрын
@@inventor121 we have other means of accelerating craft which are feasible. Laser assisted solar sails for example as proposed for the solar gravitational lense project and breakthrough slingshot.
@fnorgen
@fnorgen Ай бұрын
@@inventor121 Also, there have been quite a few missions of similar impact to the Voyagers. The Mars rovers for example, or Osiris Rex, the asteroid booping sample return mission, or the James Webb Space Telescope. There's been no shortage of more modern Voyager equivalents.
@jillsilvester7646
@jillsilvester7646 29 күн бұрын
This amazing young lady always manages to explain things in a way we can understand. All that info and a lovely friendly manner. Fab interview ! 😊
@BubbleMix-96
@BubbleMix-96 29 күн бұрын
We need to make a new one of those Gold discs
@hans3691
@hans3691 29 күн бұрын
don 't forget Voyager 1 made the foto called: the pale blue dot. Earth photographed from millions of kilometers away..
@echomike78
@echomike78 Ай бұрын
V'Ger🛰🚀🤓
@jayfirefox
@jayfirefox Ай бұрын
can’t wait for that lovely science data
@allgood6760
@allgood6760 Ай бұрын
Amazing stuff! 👍🎆
@jaker3151
@jaker3151 Ай бұрын
The thought of some advanced civilization picking up the Voyager and decoding our information, all the way out there, gives me goosebumps.
@DK-gy7ll
@DK-gy7ll Ай бұрын
Let's just all hope that they're not an invading species and they figure out where it came from. Let's also hope that none of the sounds on that golden disk are considered insults in their language...
@nuntana2
@nuntana2 Ай бұрын
​@@DK-gy7ll Easy to figure out since there is a star map of earth's location in there too.
@Realndeep99
@Realndeep99 Ай бұрын
In the grand scheme of things this object just travelled a distance let’s say 1 schoolbus from your home if we think our universe as the size of our entire galaxy so there’s very little chance of detecting life I think 🤔
@anonymes2884
@anonymes2884 Ай бұрын
@@DK-gy7ll We've been sending a pretty much constant "Hi, we're here !" signal out into the universe in every direction _at the speed of light_ for about a hundred years. So one golden record that's vanishingly unlikely to ever be found is the very least of our problems in that regard.
@Mitchell527
@Mitchell527 Ай бұрын
Some day, we will catch it in space.
@moonshoes11
@moonshoes11 Ай бұрын
That is an interesting concept.
@BloodyCrow__
@BloodyCrow__ 28 күн бұрын
Hope its not some shitty future where the rich control everything. Some rich asshat with the golden disk on a plaque on the wall of his space yacht.
@zenzo4815
@zenzo4815 28 күн бұрын
It's just fascinating that it still in active
@write2pras84
@write2pras84 Ай бұрын
“What on earth is it sending back”? But it’s not on earth sir 😂. I don’t know, that was just funny the way he said it.
@AeonMusicRecord
@AeonMusicRecord Ай бұрын
u can still get connection from billion miles away but so hard to get connection from across the world
@mbbb9244
@mbbb9244 Ай бұрын
That’s because the data equivalent of 5,125,000,000,000,000 Voyagers is transmitted around earth EVERY DAY. Pretty reliable I’d say.
@mistertagnan
@mistertagnan Ай бұрын
@@mbbb9244 it also helps that there is basically nothing in between Voyager and Earth, whereas there is an entire Earth in the way between opposite sides of the Earth
@microscopic.caterpill
@microscopic.caterpill 29 күн бұрын
I would agree, but then I remember how humongous the land antennas we got for those space craft are, then how they are spread in specific regions of the planet in diameter and range, and then how it’s specifically calculated to shoot a certain signal in a specific direction and frequency, then how it’s different how a GPS satellite would have to scatter amongst many devices compare to- 💥
@user-wt6co4ot3i
@user-wt6co4ot3i Ай бұрын
Wish this could make the world more peaceful with less misery
@RedFail1-1
@RedFail1-1 Ай бұрын
How would that even make the slightest bit of sense? Data about space solving all the problems in the world?
@CountScarlioni
@CountScarlioni Ай бұрын
Voyager 1 already tried its best to do that. Look up "the pale blue dot."
@connycontainer9459
@connycontainer9459 Ай бұрын
It's a nice change from the usual news. So for you and me and some other people it already did.
@cicakaki6587
@cicakaki6587 Ай бұрын
@@RedFail1-1the way people live their lives still in 2024.. and the beliefs they have.. imagine what a groundbreaking discovery from space or news of a highly intelligent species would do. We still fight with each other right here on earth about money and about who’s cult is better
@Blodhelm
@Blodhelm Ай бұрын
@@cicakaki6587 Our governments would never tell us. They profit off our disfunction.
Ай бұрын
Thank you BBC News. Greetings from Popayan, Colombia.
@grahametindale8292
@grahametindale8292 29 күн бұрын
In awe!
@quinkydinkend
@quinkydinkend Ай бұрын
An alien pressed ctrl alt delete
@homesteadireland7473
@homesteadireland7473 Ай бұрын
We didn’t know that we had advanced chips like that all that time ago ? We just thought we had fish ands chips then lol 😂
@wizardgherkin
@wizardgherkin Ай бұрын
just because mass produced microcontrollers weren't (broadly) around, doesn't mean there were no electronics!
@wheezingjuice
@wheezingjuice 29 күн бұрын
Way to go Voyager team! it's an astonishing computer architecture that allows for such a repair, conceptually ahead of its time for sure. Reminds a little of the human brain where different parts can compensate for smaller localized damages in other parts. I hope we'll see Voyager's upcoming 50th anniversary still operational!
@Kallekringla3
@Kallekringla3 29 күн бұрын
Wow. Beautiful! And the Voyger-1 is cool too!
@MaheshWalatara
@MaheshWalatara Ай бұрын
It's also got a galactic map that pinpoints the location of the Sol System to any potential aliens which I don't think was a good idea. 😢
@mbrackeva
@mbrackeva Ай бұрын
Why not? God knows we need all the help we can get...
@nic.h
@nic.h Ай бұрын
It's a very small needle in a very large haystack. You should be much more concerned with our electromagnetic emissions if you are worried about aliens locating us, as they are multi directional and travel at significantly faster speeds and still allow the source to be located, although they do get weaker the further they travel as per the inverse square law.
@raptorwhite6468
@raptorwhite6468 Ай бұрын
Aliens have no reason to fight us, if they can travel between planetary systems, we aren't a threat and if they needed resources, they'd rather take it from a planet with no life on it
@jeffreyadams8264
@jeffreyadams8264 Ай бұрын
46 years in space and dodged all thoses meteors! Stop it! Get some help!
@ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid
@ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid Ай бұрын
By the time Voyager 2 even launched, it was already several decades too late to stop that problem. We've been venting information into space since at least 1936.
@user-oy3mg6jh1f
@user-oy3mg6jh1f Ай бұрын
NASA: We’re the smartest government agency out there. We sent a man to the moon! Also NASA: *forgets to maintain archaic code, doesn’t realize it’s a software issue for decades, and doesn’t do anything to fix it until it’s almost to late. But seriously, what is our generation coming to; when organizations like NASA are failing us in there endeavors within space exploration? EDIT: To be explicit, the chips on Voyager 1 were malfunctioning for years, and NASA fixed them with a simple software-patch; which altered the program that managed the chips onboard Voyager 1. If somebody is telling ya that this was only a hardware issue, then they don't know what they're talking about, and they've probably never worked in IT a day in their life.
@Hobbes746
@Hobbes746 Ай бұрын
Nope. Voyager 1 failed because one of the memory chips in one of its computers malfunctioned. This is not a software issue.
@user-oy3mg6jh1f
@user-oy3mg6jh1f Ай бұрын
@@Hobbes746 the reporter in the video just explained that the chips weren’t routing properly. The solution was software based. But the issue itself was hardware related. Did you even listen to the video?
@biggerdickus
@biggerdickus 29 күн бұрын
It is hard to maintain stuff, I know, the old engineers I worked with left poor notebooks with many things missing.
@bobmusil1458
@bobmusil1458 29 күн бұрын
What are you even talking about? The communication failed last November because of a hardware issue. And then they fixed the hardware problem with a software patch. Before November 2023 Voyager had worked for 40 years flawlessly. .
@Hobbes746
@Hobbes746 29 күн бұрын
@@user-oy3mg6jh1f No amount of software maintenance can prevent electronic circuits from failing. You were claiming Voyager’s problem was due to an issue in the software that NASA had failed to spot for “decades”, which is not at all the case.
@ateamfan42
@ateamfan42 29 күн бұрын
@0:50 As a person who is also 4-1/2 decades old, I can confirm that not all systems work quite the way they did when freshly manufactured.
@OfentseMwaseFilms
@OfentseMwaseFilms 28 күн бұрын
Billions of miles away and still sending signals, but I can't even get my son to get me a beer from the fridge
@yellowface6314
@yellowface6314 28 күн бұрын
Man you gotta get up and get it yourself cuz those calories ain’t gonna burn themselves lol
@mtheory85
@mtheory85 Ай бұрын
"Failure is not an option." - NASA "Durr if rocket no go boom it success!" - SpaceX
@mbrackeva
@mbrackeva Ай бұрын
Even if it does go boom SpaceX says it's a success.
@nicholashylton6857
@nicholashylton6857 Ай бұрын
​@@mbrackevaYeah. It bugs me that that philosophy is now the "in thing." It would have been excusable in the 40s & 50s, but not in the 21st century.
@mistertagnan
@mistertagnan Ай бұрын
Failures of LVs during testing are extremely common and expected. Thor and Atlas failed many, many times when they were first being made, and now they’re the basis for some of the most launched LVs ever Failure with crew is not an option, failure during tests is preferable to complete success. Better to fail frequently during testing and discover problems, than to let a potentially lethal problem slip through the cracks as it awaits the day it claims its first victim
@anonymes2884
@anonymes2884 Ай бұрын
I'm no fan of Elon Musk as a human but SpaceX's _established_ launch vehicles have a success rate comparable to any on the planet. Sure, their _tests of prototypes_ often end in explosions. That's _why_ you test. Prototype rockets are basically _going_ to explode, the point is what you learn as a result.
@mbrackeva
@mbrackeva Ай бұрын
@@anonymes2884 Do you actually have any inside numbers on this? Or do you base yourself on popular news? I'm under the impression this is a very naive statement.
@billsmith5109
@billsmith5109 28 күн бұрын
So after almost 47 years Voyager I is about 94% of one light-day away from Earth. So 50 years to travel one light day. Or about 77,500 years to Alpha Centauri, if instead it was heading that way.
@MultiSweeney1
@MultiSweeney1 27 күн бұрын
Voyager 1: "I didn't hear no bell"
@PtolemyJones
@PtolemyJones 29 күн бұрын
So love this mission, I was a kid when it launched, along with it's sister, and always interested in news about them.
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