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In less than one year, Voyager 1 will be one light-day from Earth.

Posted on 12/10/25 at 10:56 pm
Posted by reverendotis
the jawbone of an arse
Member since Nov 2007
4966 posts
Posted on 12/10/25 at 10:56 pm
Cruising along at 11 miles per second, it will be roughly 13 billion miles from Earth next November. Its trajectory has remained basically unchanged since whipping around Saturn in the 1980s.

Plutonium fuel source will be exhausted below the point of worthwhile function some time in the 2030s. After that, it more or less freezes up, unable to keep its antennas pointed toward Earth. It will keep going forever on the same line unless it smacks into something or gets pulled by something's gravity.

The Voyager program remains far and away one of not just NASA's but humanity's greatest ventures.

Popular Science

All of mankind's exploits - even warfare - are trivial compared to exploration. If people throughout all time had simply stayed put, fricking one another and sometimes fighting against their neighbors there would be very little history to record.

We've been content to sit on our asses in low Earth orbit for decades.
Posted by Spankum
Miss-sippi
Member since Jan 2007
60520 posts
Posted on 12/10/25 at 11:11 pm to
Everything about that program is just mind-boggling to me!
Posted by L.A.
The Mojave Desert
Member since Aug 2003
65328 posts
Posted on 12/10/25 at 11:13 pm to
I'm not trying to brag, but I once travelled a light day in 20 minutes.

Posted by ellunchboxo
G-Town
Member since Feb 2009
19279 posts
Posted on 12/10/25 at 11:21 pm to
I bet you saved a ton in gas
Posted by reverendotis
the jawbone of an arse
Member since Nov 2007
4966 posts
Posted on 12/10/25 at 11:21 pm to
One of the best statistics isn't a superlative (farthest, fastest, oldest, etc) it is how slow it communicates, 160 bits per second.

An engineering monument to using your available bandwidth efficiently.
Posted by FightinTigersDammit
Louisiana North
Member since Mar 2006
46271 posts
Posted on 12/10/25 at 11:38 pm to
"Send more Chuck Berry"
Posted by CAD703X
Liberty Island
Member since Jul 2008
91346 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 12:13 am to
All fun and games until it's swallowed up by that giant cloud and comes back to Earth and tries to kill us.
Posted by cgrand
HAMMOND
Member since Oct 2009
46488 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 12:27 am to
V’GER
Posted by Juan Betanzos
New Orleans
Member since Nov 2005
3689 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 12:28 am to
The original Star Trek movie——- “V_y_ger”
Posted by HubbaBubba
North of DFW, TX
Member since Oct 2010
50814 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 12:33 am to
On the campus of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, CA, is an amazing visual representation of the very tiny little bytes of data sent to Earth by Voyager 1. The control center that monitors all of NASA's satellites and rovers on Mars is in the room behind it.

Posted by WWII Collector
Member since Oct 2018
8585 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 12:37 am to
quote:

"Send more Chuck Berry"


And less Cardi B...
Posted by AlwysATgr
Member since Apr 2008
20117 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 12:44 am to
quote:

We've been content to sit on our asses in low Earth orbit for decades.


Speak for yourself. DEI has made tremendous advancements in those decades. It don't need no voyager to do what it gone do.
Posted by messyjesse
Member since Nov 2015
2216 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 12:56 am to
I imagine this is how this conversation went down.

"Hey, I got an idea! Let's strap some instruments to rockets and blast them as far away from Earth as possible!"

"Great idea boss!"

"Hell yeah! We're NASA, we can do whatever the hell we want!"

"I should inform you that to achieve this, we'll need gold, plutonium, beryllium, uranium, platinum..."

"Ah frick it, we don't need any of that shite on earth!"
Posted by cattus
Member since Jan 2009
15332 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 1:08 am to
quote:

We've been content to sit on our asses in low Earth orbit for decades.
quote:

In less than one year, Voyager 1 will be one light-day from Earth
I wonder why we've been content to sit on our asses
Posted by reverendotis
the jawbone of an arse
Member since Nov 2007
4966 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 1:11 am to
I understand the dispersion of the return signal is so great and the magnitude so weak that it is harvested from radio telescopes all over Earth's surface then reassembled.

Consider the reverse, the Earth origin commands sent to it 13 billion miles away must be very, very, very well aimed to be received on the craft's relatively tiny receiver.
Posted by Stexas
SWLA
Member since May 2013
6841 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 6:44 am to
I’m very ignorant but this seems counterintuitive.

quote:

Consider the reverse, the Earth origin commands sent to it 13 billion miles away must be very, very, very well aimed to be received on the craft's relatively tiny receiver.



I imagine radio waves like this.


Ever expanding not concentrated and focused.
Posted by Bestbank Tiger
Premium Member
Member since Jan 2005
79132 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 6:44 am to
We need to do another one using modern tech. It'll be smaller, faster, more durable, and have better communication.
Posted by MintBerry Crunch
Member since Nov 2010
5808 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 6:49 am to
quote:

We've been content to sit on our asses in low Earth orbit for decades.


Yeah, radiation’s a real bitch.
Posted by Scruffy
Kansas City
Member since Jul 2011
76540 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 7:30 am to
Well, I did the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs.
Posted by UptownJoeBrown
Baton Rouge
Member since Jul 2024
7194 posts
Posted on 12/11/25 at 7:32 am to
Why not post this until it’s actually one light day from Earth?
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