What Will Happen to Voyager and Others in the Far Future?

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024
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  • @CuriousDroid
    @CuriousDroid  Месяц назад +24

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    • @ronbennett7885
      @ronbennett7885 Месяц назад +4

      Basically, a way around georestrictions to view media from elsewhere. For security, 3rd party VPNs are risky. They have a spotty track record. Buyer beware.

    • @Alfred-Neuman
      @Alfred-Neuman Месяц назад +1

      If in the future an alien is able to retrieve one of voyager's golden record, how much would it be worth on his planet in American dollars? (with inflation)

    • @Sonnell
      @Sonnell Месяц назад +7

      @CuriousDroid Thanks for the nice videos. I noticed they are not smooth when there is a continuous movement on the picture. I think because your videos are 25fps, while most computer and phone displays are working at 60Hz. Hence it has to skip frames while playback.
      Using 30 or 60fps would make your videos play back smooth :)

    • @Snowbird815
      @Snowbird815 Месяц назад +4

      It has been proven time over time again, that VPNs do not contribute to online security. Thats all marketing bs. And "braking" geoblocking is prohibitied by most Terms and Conditions and sometimes even illegal by law in some cases. I wish They would stop marketing so aggressively.
      I do understand the need for admoney for channels like yours, but as a Patreon I would wish for no, or at least not so fishy ads.

    • @ronbennett7885
      @ronbennett7885 Месяц назад +2

      @@Snowbird815 I don't give money to any channel that double-dips. Worse, he's promoting a service that likely reduces one's security.

  • @nokitanada7390
    @nokitanada7390 Месяц назад +394

    Awaiting for the return of V-GER.

    • @BLD426
      @BLD426 Месяц назад +27

      Well, we got the bald but not the hot girl.😁

    • @mhughes1160
      @mhughes1160 Месяц назад +9

      We know , it it connects with the other and becomes
      Nomad Then it wanders through the universe seeking to
      sterilize imperfect life forms Then Kirk uses trecky logic
      and it blows itself up never to be heard from again
      Until the many episodes and movies later then it returns as V-GER

    • @paulkevinkoehler9490
      @paulkevinkoehler9490 Месяц назад +2

      @@BLD426 haha--ouch!

    • @mandi8345
      @mandi8345 Месяц назад +11

      What about V-GINY?

    • @cjay2
      @cjay2 Месяц назад +3

      You'll be waiting a long time.

  • @marcse7en
    @marcse7en Месяц назад +244

    Well, in 100 billion years from now, there's one thing for sure, the Voyager spacecraft definitely WON'T get any more software updates!

    • @mandi8345
      @mandi8345 Месяц назад +18

      Voyager got more updates than any of my cell phones, ever, combined....

    • @Antymatters
      @Antymatters Месяц назад +22

      Someone's not watched Star Trek. Voyager comes back in 100 odd years and becomes a pretty hot women

    • @Solnoric
      @Solnoric Месяц назад +3

      Well, updates from US, at any rate.

    • @johnw3379
      @johnw3379 Месяц назад +4

      Like windows 7 lol

    • @marcse7en
      @marcse7en Месяц назад +10

      @@Solnoric Just imagine, in the far distant future, an alien civilisation intercepts Voyager ... A relic from a long-dead civilisation ... A "pale blue dot," called "Earth." 😭

  • @BB-sr7ou
    @BB-sr7ou Месяц назад +20

    My father worked at the Cornell University Theory Center alongside Carl Sagan on the Voyager projects. He was one of many on Sagan's team. Cornell's Theory Center is where the gold records were created. At the time, the center had one of the world's largest super computers. My dad passed in 2012 and it makes me proud to know that he was apart of something like this.

    • @COlson-rh3dg
      @COlson-rh3dg Месяц назад +2

      cool.

    • @Space_Rebel
      @Space_Rebel 29 дней назад +1

      Wow. Your Dad’s work is part of a legacy that will outlast our star.

    • @BB-sr7ou
      @BB-sr7ou 21 день назад +2

      @@Space_Rebel Thanks bro. I've thought about that too. My dad had his hands on the only man-made object to leave our solar system. Somehow it feels, in a weird way, like he'll live on forever.

    • @soulcrewblue8629
      @soulcrewblue8629 12 дней назад +1

      Worked alongside, who I think is the greatest man who ever lived, the one and only Carl Sagan.

  • @wahoo236
    @wahoo236 Месяц назад +235

    We all know the answer to this…. Voyager will fall into a black hole and emerge on the far side of the galaxy where it will meet a very advanced race of machines. They will give Voyager an immense cloud vessel and send it back across the galaxy to find its creator.

    • @shaunlaverty8898
      @shaunlaverty8898 Месяц назад +28

      V-Ger returns!

    • @MemoirsofaBasketcase
      @MemoirsofaBasketcase Месяц назад +14

      I hate to be that guy that was/will be Voyager 6.

    • @jamestrexler6329
      @jamestrexler6329 Месяц назад +20

      And one of the Pioneer probes will be destroyed by a Klingon Bird of Prey

    • @macman975
      @macman975 Месяц назад +7

      I knew it would be here. Anything Voyager and you get this customary Star Trek comment.

    • @noahway13
      @noahway13 Месяц назад +2

      You skimmed past the wormhole part, but I get it.

  • @andersjjensen
    @andersjjensen Месяц назад +298

    Unfashionable part of the western spiral arm? Someone bough stock in the eastern spiral arm and want to manipulate prices, I see......

    • @BLD426
      @BLD426 Месяц назад +10

      That's a Scooby Doo plot. You plagarist. 😁

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen Месяц назад +37

      @@BLD426 A Scooby Doo plot on a Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy quote is not plagiarism. It's meme culture :P

    • @BLD426
      @BLD426 Месяц назад +4

      @@andersjjensen You got me. I stand corrected.😁

    • @norlockv
      @norlockv Месяц назад +24

      Douglas Adams’ - Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy

    • @rustycherkas8229
      @rustycherkas8229 Месяц назад +13

      Harmless... until the reality of their littering changed that to "mostly harmless"... 🙂

  • @AdamsWorlds
    @AdamsWorlds Месяц назад +71

    Its mind boggling to me how we managed to get so far and so fast in the 60s and 70s. We went in the 1800s from no trains, no cars, no flight, could not even mass produce various metals.. to building space craft and slingshoting around planets. Madness, what a species we are.

    • @Lintary
      @Lintary Месяц назад +7

      The intelligence focused build of humans is truly overpowered and amazing

    • @cjay2
      @cjay2 Месяц назад

      That was before the results of the 'dumbing-down' of America (and the rest of the world).

    • @petroelb
      @petroelb Месяц назад +5

      And now we have TikTok!

    • @codymoe4986
      @codymoe4986 Месяц назад +3

      Eh, the industrial revolution took place during the 1800's... there were cars, trains, and the introduction of mass production of multiple products, including metals.
      And hot air balloons were first flown in the late 1700's...AKA flight.

    • @Frank-Thoresen
      @Frank-Thoresen Месяц назад +1

      But we can't eradicate malaria, HIV, Cancer types etc.

  • @EtienneSturm1
    @EtienneSturm1 Месяц назад +91

    the grand tour is simply the MOST IMPRESSIVE
    mission NASA ever came up with. I'm a huge fan

    • @ToucanSonofSam333
      @ToucanSonofSam333 Месяц назад +5

      I remember waiting for the arrival of voyager at Uranus and Neptune as a little kid

    • @CyberSystemOverload
      @CyberSystemOverload Месяц назад

      Flandro , an absolute hero and genius:
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Flandro

    • @curtcoller3632
      @curtcoller3632 Месяц назад

      Then why don't you sit in voyager 2 and enjoy the view?

    • @benedictdonald4338
      @benedictdonald4338 Месяц назад

      How is it that the Democrats (ie: the Clintons) can create hurricanes in Florida but can’t master travel at the speed of light (or slightly below it)? This all smells of BS to me. They can reach Alpha Centauri but are clearly choosing not to. Lock her up!

    • @stoobydootoo4098
      @stoobydootoo4098 Месяц назад

      Being a huge fan, you must be really cool! yik.

  • @morgangallowglass8668
    @morgangallowglass8668 Месяц назад +35

    Being old enough to recall the launches of these marvels, it makes me smile to think they are still out there. Another cracking shirt, sir!

  • @johngalt2506
    @johngalt2506 Месяц назад +90

    Your shirts prove that our Spiral arm will always be fashionable 😅

    • @Michael-dy2lb
      @Michael-dy2lb 6 дней назад

      I believe that was a reference to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, which described our location in the galaxy as the unfashionable end of a spiral arm.

  • @2ToneWalt
    @2ToneWalt Месяц назад +8

    It just blows my mind when I think about the distance these things have travelled.

  • @Narrowgaugefilms
    @Narrowgaugefilms 15 дней назад +3

    Many million years from now one of the Voyagers will be in a science museum on some planet unspeakably far away from here. There will be a sign in front of the display in a language we can't interpret that translates to "This object was found adrift in space and recovered. It is our best evidence for existence of alien civilizations".

  • @edwardneal4819
    @edwardneal4819 Месяц назад +65

    Nice nod to Douglas Adams.

  • @neoncyber2001
    @neoncyber2001 Месяц назад +7

    I love that you threw in that line from the Hitch Hikers Guide at the end!

  • @bosonbreeder
    @bosonbreeder Месяц назад +50

    Poor Voyager 1. One really is the loneliest number.

    • @jr2904
      @jr2904 Месяц назад +9

      But 2 can be as bad as one because it's the loneliest number since the number 1

    • @BLD426
      @BLD426 Месяц назад +3

      That was bad. 😁

    • @Lord_Machiavelli
      @Lord_Machiavelli Месяц назад +3

      Not as lonly as me...

    • @Klaus-777
      @Klaus-777 Месяц назад +1

      The creator is lonely and waiting for rescue. When he wakes up everything will be gone.

    • @sperez98324
      @sperez98324 Месяц назад +1

      Companionship is overrated 🤓

  • @MurCurieux
    @MurCurieux Месяц назад +6

    The vastness of space always inspires me and at the same time fills me with dread.

  • @emergingloki
    @emergingloki Месяц назад +39

    I love how Hitchhikers just keeps making cameos across the astrophysics and astronomy scene. Sleep well Doug.

    • @bobdobalina2931
      @bobdobalina2931 Месяц назад

      I hope he's not sleeping, that would be a terrible waste. I hope he's hitchhiking his way around the galaxy before going on an intergalactic cruise in his office.

    • @nathanielross8232
      @nathanielross8232 Месяц назад

      Eating at a restaurant at the end of the universe 🙏

  • @ffffuchs
    @ffffuchs Месяц назад +66

    It's so infuriating they cut out missions that were only possible ONCE every 175 years because some politicans didn't want to sign away a few billion dollars, even if the Voyagers later more or less accomplished the original goals.

    • @user-vr8zs3ei7n
      @user-vr8zs3ei7n Месяц назад

      I wonder what cost so much in the early 1970's that the US did not want to spend billions of extra dollars for a extra space probes. Cough Vietnam war Cough.

    • @clydemarshall8095
      @clydemarshall8095 Месяц назад +9

      You do realize that’s an incredible amount of money, tax payer money, to spend on something with little tangible return on investment right?
      Their reticence is completely understandable.

    • @whuzzzup
      @whuzzzup Месяц назад +26

      @@clydemarshall8095 Little hint: You don't send the money to space. It's used to pay the people who build & launch the craft and the company.

    • @domesticterrorist483
      @domesticterrorist483 Месяц назад +1

      People are forced to pay for these junklets for state employed engineers. It is fundementally immoral. Why don't you start a private space explorationcompany so that enthusiasts like you can pay for it out of your own pockets?

    • @ronbennett7885
      @ronbennett7885 Месяц назад +1

      The planets are all still accessible, but not in one mission. Space probes are routinely launched by various countries. Also, with better technology, they can reach those places faster.

  • @RobCLynch
    @RobCLynch Месяц назад +5

    We think that we live for a long time, marvelling at our average lifespan of 78 years. Yet, it eventually becomes clear that we are just blips on a tiny scale, compared with the age of the universe.

    • @HobbyOrganist
      @HobbyOrganist 22 дня назад +1

      VERY insignificant compared to time like 5 BILLION years...

  • @glennbabic5954
    @glennbabic5954 Месяц назад +62

    I got that HHGTTG reference!

  • @benjaminwilson4558
    @benjaminwilson4558 Месяц назад +4

    "Everything" is succinctly put into perspective when distance and especially time is the common denominator. How humbling!😮

  • @P5ychoFox
    @P5ychoFox Месяц назад +7

    Wow, nobody ever mentions the spin weights! Nice work.

  • @christopher9270
    @christopher9270 24 дня назад +1

    I've been a passionate amateur astronomer since the age of 12...and I'll never forget the first color photos of Jupiter (my favorite planet telescopically) returned by the Pioneer probes.
    That little ovoid disk I'd always seen through the eyepiece...with it's bands of clouds and storms and the GRS just visible...was suddenly revealed as such a huge, colorful and dynamic place.
    I thought it was fantastic...and it was.
    And we have now visited every planet in the solar system...have probes orbiting planets even now; and rovers driving over the landscape of Mars.
    We've visited comets and landed on asteroids.
    It's a privilege to be alive to see this.

    • @HobbyOrganist
      @HobbyOrganist 22 дня назад

      "And we have now visited every planet in the solar system...have probes orbiting planets even now; and rovers driving over the landscape of Mars."
      And we found they are all just dead and cold, with nothing but rocks and sand as far are the eye can see, uninhabitable, and in the case of the gas giants- they don't have a surface like we know, and their atmosphere is nothing but deadly gas and life destroying radiation.

  • @aprintojoss8079
    @aprintojoss8079 Месяц назад +3

    In my opinion and simple calculation (with some assumptions of course), *HUMAN TRAVEL TO PLANETS IN PROXIMA IS IMPOSSIBLE* ....
    Because:
    1. Voyager 1 and 2 need to carry 22 kg of PLUTONIUM 238. While to get to Proxima requires *50 TONS of PLUTONIUM 238* ....
    2. With current technology, Voyager 1 and 2 are capable of traveling at a speed of 20km per second. Suppose there is Voyager 3, carrying humans traveling at a speed of 25km per second, *IT WILL ARRIVE AT PROXIMA AFTER 50 THOUSAND YEARS!*
    3. If the speed is increased to *250 km per second* , it will arrive there in *5000 YEARS* ... The fastest spacecraft speed today is *SOLAR PROBE = 195 km per second.*
    4. If the speed is 9500 km per second* , then it will take *2500 years* and if the plane is at a speed of *1000 km per second* , it will still take *1200 years!* ....
    5. WARP speed is fiction, because *THERE ARE NOTHING FASTER THAN THE SPEED OF LIGHT* (speed of light = 300 thousand km per second).
    So, 1200 years is need *TENS OF HUMAN GENERATIONS* ....
    Not to mention the provision of food, clothing, etc. There needs to be a factory, school, hospital in the plane that humans board to go to Proxima.
    *THAT IS THE REASON OF MY THINKING WHY IMPOSSIBLE FOR HUMANS TO GO TO PROXIMA* ....

  • @nigeldepledge3790
    @nigeldepledge3790 Месяц назад +4

    I like the nod to the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
    "Far out in the uncharted regions of the unfashionable end of the western spiral arm of the galaxy lies a small, unregarded yellow sun . . ."

  • @elainebenes7971
    @elainebenes7971 Месяц назад +16

    12:00 I've never heard of Sirius being called Delta Sirius before.

    • @WillArtie
      @WillArtie Месяц назад +5

      lol yeah I know. Alpha Canis Major or just plain Sirius. Maybe there's a constellation called Sirius that we don't know about, and for some reason it's brightest star got the forth designation, delta?!

    • @ximalas
      @ximalas Месяц назад

      Maybe he meant δ Canis Majoris, at RA 07h 08m 23.48608s, dec −26° 23′ 35.5474″.

    • @WillArtie
      @WillArtie Месяц назад +4

      @ximalas yeah maybe, though he did say "the brightest star in the night sky", so he was most probably talking about Sirius - just not sure why that delta was slipped in there!

  • @ShaneSchrute
    @ShaneSchrute Месяц назад +15

    I love thinking about this idea.

  • @MarkTheMorose
    @MarkTheMorose Месяц назад +14

    Only some old space probes, and some patterned shirts worn by CD will outlive us to bear witness to humankind's existence.

    • @jpaulc441
      @jpaulc441 Месяц назад

      Also, pure gold bars in underground bank vaults and some objects on the Moon.

    • @darko714
      @darko714 Месяц назад

      And Kieth Richards

  • @davidadams421
    @davidadams421 Месяц назад +9

    Once we crack superluminal flight, someone will crowdfund a reclamation project to bring them all home. And if you're reading this in the year 2245, I called it first!

    • @Mrbobinge
      @Mrbobinge Месяц назад

      Yup, nip out there after breakfast, 'Bye honey' see ya this evening. Might be late, another scrap pick-up.

    • @fabianmckenna8197
      @fabianmckenna8197 Месяц назад

      ​@@Mrbobinge
      Ok dear........
      See you at the second hand record shop.

  • @oeliamoya9796
    @oeliamoya9796 Месяц назад +9

    4:05 to skip through sponsored ad

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 25 дней назад +1

      That's nice, but I'm looking for the time code for when the actual answer is provided. Seriously, almost 18 minutes for what should take 18 seconds? Cringe level click bait.

  • @NobleOmnicide
    @NobleOmnicide Месяц назад +6

    Algorithms be damned! This is the content that RUclips should promote. This video should be trending on the front page right now.
    RUclips can be the arbiter of education if it truly cared to be.
    (Before you bother hitting reply, open a private browser window where you are not signed in. That's the content RUclips promotes.)
    (Yes, I know RUclips showed YOU this video, because you already are subscribed OR you already have shown an interest in this type of content.)

    • @Only_Some
      @Only_Some 24 дня назад

      That's completely subjective as this is something that I go to sleep to not something that I watch to get entertained so therefore the algorithm recommended me the wrong video.
      And before you reply back just so you know that when you are not signed in those are not recommended videos those are what is trending get your facts straight
      Because if you create a new account and then login the only thing you are going to get recommended is what is currently trending the moment that you start to search stuff up is the moment that the algorithm kicks in because it starts to look up and keep a watch of what your history is to try to figure out what it needs to send you based on your algorithm.
      You can further test this by completely turn it off your watch history and deleting your history and then try and go into the recommended You won't get anything
      You're welcome

    • @NobleOmnicide
      @NobleOmnicide 24 дня назад

      @@Only_Some I know how it works. All that TL:DR is common knowledge. Every time I make a similar comment, someone like you always disregards the fact that RUclips has control over what they want to say is trending. You're welcome.

  • @SuperAnatolli
    @SuperAnatolli Месяц назад +10

    They will probably be eaten by the Mutant Stargoat.

    • @daddad8707
      @daddad8707 Месяц назад

      OR land alongside the "B" ark

  • @davepoul8483
    @davepoul8483 Месяц назад +20

    Space is big.. very big... you might think its a long way to the chemist, but this is nothing comapired to the size of space.... :)

    • @joebloggs1317
      @joebloggs1317 Месяц назад +7

      You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is

    • @DavidCowie2022
      @DavidCowie2022 Месяц назад

      "Stars occupy minute amounts of space. They huddle together a few million here, a few million there, as if seeking security in numbers."
      -- From "The Black Corridor" by Hawkwind.

    • @wailingalen
      @wailingalen Месяц назад

      Look up some of the scale versions models of the solar system and universe. There is a zoom out that illustrates this vastness demonstrably and wow.
      Btw way you must be British bc you said chemist 😅is that your word for “pharmacist”?

    • @joebloggs1317
      @joebloggs1317 Месяц назад +2

      @@wailingalen 'Chemist' , that was a quote from a book, and yes the author was English

  • @thedungeondelver
    @thedungeondelver Месяц назад +12

    If we invented spacecraft that could travel far, far faster than them I wonder if it'd be worth it to go get at least one of them, say Pioneer 11, to study the effects of however long it had been out there.
    Also nice _Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy_ reference. :)

    • @HossBlacksilver
      @HossBlacksilver Месяц назад +1

      Only have to wait until April 2151 for the launch of the NX-01.

  • @Renee_R343
    @Renee_R343 Месяц назад +4

    Damn, what a way to make one feel small and meaningless with the closing remark.
    (In a humbling not a derogatory way)

  • @MrCordycep
    @MrCordycep Месяц назад +102

    At $1 billion the Grand Tour would have been peanuts compared to the money America threw at the Vietnam War which is around $120 billion over eight years.

    • @revolutionhamburger
      @revolutionhamburger Месяц назад

      Now calculate the cost of the welfare state. Then add the cost of illegal immigrants. Add institutional government corruption. If that won't buy a gold plated Mars colony then I a monkey's uncle.

    • @johnmat4678
      @johnmat4678 Месяц назад

      It is estimated America is spending 12 billion a month to house and feed the 10 million illegal aliens the Biden /Harris administration has let into this once great country. Think about it come November 5th.

    • @rubiks6
      @rubiks6 Месяц назад +2

      But then again, what would it have really accomplished? Would it have brought world peace or ended hunger or cured cancer?

    • @BioFake1
      @BioFake1 Месяц назад +24

      @@rubiks6 Same question about the Vietnam War. At least space techs make their way back to earth, think survival blankets, disposable diapers, moon boots, and the list goes on and on.

    • @killerbern666
      @killerbern666 Месяц назад +18

      @@BioFake1and they dont kill hundreds of housands of people...

  • @skun406
    @skun406 Месяц назад +5

    I like to imagine that in a trillion years, the aliens will find a peculiar debris in their otherwise tidy cosmic backyard. They'll look at the golden record and be amazed by how ancient it is.

  • @TelAnnas_
    @TelAnnas_ Месяц назад +5

    The Grand Tour became an online show about some random three middle-aged men buggering about in cars and boats.
    I love it.

  • @BuzzKiller23
    @BuzzKiller23 Месяц назад +3

    2:16 I absolutely love that picture

  • @greatsilentwatcher
    @greatsilentwatcher Месяц назад +2

    I always appreciate your straightforward commentary on the subjects you cover. Thanks. - Todd in Rochester, NY.

  • @Chris-kq9lb
    @Chris-kq9lb Месяц назад +2

    Hi i'm a History buff. I live in the Carina Sag arm of MW. Some of my neighbor's travel the Galaxy and they are antique archeologist's. They bring back antiques alot. I have a busy job so can't travel as much as they do. But I got to see one of antique probes they brought back. It was really old and seemed hilariously Nuclear powered. It's a total centerpiece of their home because of how it used radio waves to communicate. My wife almost spilled tea on it as they use it as a table, the gold record is cool. We are immortal so travel times are insignificant but I prefer to stay home with my mortal friends and because i'm a business manager I cant' travel as much as my neighbors.

  • @Norsilca
    @Norsilca Месяц назад +18

    I was hoping to hear what shape the Voyagers will be in after billions of years. It's fascinating to imagine that they'll outlast the Sun, but I always wonder if they'll be intact by then. We can't really know, but I'd love it if someone looked into the chemistry, physics, and space science to speculate. What effect will the few atoms in the interstellar medium have? Are there enough micrometeorites to eat away at it after 5 billion years? How long will the golden record be playable?

    • @beargiles4062
      @beargiles4062 Месяц назад +5

      I've wondered about the same thing for a long time. Interstellar space is mostly empty - but not completely empty and the odd hydrogen molecule, to say nothing of the rarer larger molecules, will hit the craft at incredible velocities.
      I know the bulk will remain intact until it hits something larger, but what about the spindly arms? How long until they're sufficiently eroded to separate?

    • @ncwoodworker
      @ncwoodworker Месяц назад +3

      It would be remarkable if we were to have an incounter of a space probe launch 100 million years ago from a plant millions miles away.

    • @roachtoasties
      @roachtoasties Месяц назад +2

      Me too. After a period of time (millions of years) whatever atoms, photons, molecules, etc., that have hit it may have worn down its surfaces. The golden record may also have been worn down to a point that it's no longer playable. That shouldn't be an issue, since the folks at NASA didn't provide a golden record player on board. The space aliens will look at the record, then look for the record player. When they don't find one, they'll then forget about even trying to play it since they don't have a Best Buy nearby to buy a record player.

    • @AbbyNormL
      @AbbyNormL Месяц назад

      Be funny if the first alien to obtain the golden record thinks it is a frisbee instead of a data storage device.

    • @HobbyOrganist
      @HobbyOrganist 22 дня назад

      Nothing will happen to them over that time, there's meteorites circulating around for millions, billions of years.
      I own a couple of pieces of the Arizona meteorite that hit about 50,000 years ago, so pieces of that laid intact that long before being found.
      And when you think the iron meteorite itself was originally the center of a planet until something happened like a collision between two planets- were talking about billions of years there!

  • @TheOtherSteel
    @TheOtherSteel Месяц назад +9

    In the far future? I'm guessing our ideas of far future are different. In my far future, all their power sources will have dropped to zero and they'll continue on course until finally striking some particle large enough to do damage.

    • @EdwardHinton-qs4ry
      @EdwardHinton-qs4ry Месяц назад +4

      Actually dust sized particles will erode the probe away far before it hits any larger object by chance.

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 Месяц назад

      Now way of knowing when it could hit something substantial.......by chance.

  • @koppadasao
    @koppadasao Месяц назад +3

    7:57 I guess Pioneer 10 will the first to taste Aldebaran Whiskey...

  • @paulwhelan7105
    @paulwhelan7105 Месяц назад +15

    17:18 ...Sector ZZ9 Plural Z Alpha :)

  • @atillakarman9298
    @atillakarman9298 Месяц назад +2

    I see/hear a Hitchhiker's Guide quote and I press like.
    Very nice and informative video again, by the way. Thank you!

  • @jag12549
    @jag12549 Месяц назад

    Dude
    So stoked you made this video. The first time I learned about voyager 2 in middle school it absolutely blew mind wide open.

  • @Wholiganify
    @Wholiganify Месяц назад +1

    This is why I'm a subscriber, Mr Droid! Loving your content

  • @ChristopherRobertHarris
    @ChristopherRobertHarris Месяц назад +13

    Really interesting video, the size of even our own galaxy is just mind blowing. It’s really amazing to think that at some point in the distant future some other life form may come across these earth probes. Our ʻOumuamua perhaps?

  • @EarthenDam
    @EarthenDam Месяц назад +2

    Star Trek V showed us that a bored out of his mind Klingon Captain blew it up, even though 300 years into the future it would still be less than a light year from Earth.

  • @renegadeace1735
    @renegadeace1735 Месяц назад +2

    I feel like with the voyager probes humanity has achieved immortality cause no matter what happens in this solar system they'll be some little piece of us out there floating around in deep space.

    • @Space_Rebel
      @Space_Rebel 29 дней назад +1

      Our legacy could just boil down to these probes…or if we’re lucky, we could pick them up and place them in museums on Earth or other planets…

  • @paulhaynes8045
    @paulhaynes8045 Месяц назад +10

    I trust they've all got 'Don't panic!' stenciled on them...

    • @Mrbobinge
      @Mrbobinge Месяц назад

      More like "Passing side" "Suicide" on respective corners.

  • @scottjuhnke6825
    @scottjuhnke6825 Месяц назад

    Really glad to see you back in my feed! Thank you.

  • @X-Gen-001
    @X-Gen-001 Месяц назад

    Brilliant video. I remember seeing those animations on tv as a kid in the 70's, I thought they were so cool because they easily showed how the probes would slingshot from one planet to another.

  • @Barry65_UK
    @Barry65_UK День назад

    A video actually narrated by a real human being. So refreshing..

  • @afoolandhismoneychannel
    @afoolandhismoneychannel Месяц назад +3

    You truly believe that humans will be long gone in the next 40000 years? That's depressing.

    • @brianarbenz1329
      @brianarbenz1329 Месяц назад

      I'm not going anywhere. I've got my Linus Pauling vitamin regimen and my giant supply of freeze dried foods to last me that long and longer. I can't wait for that phonograph record from Voyager to come back!

    • @gabecollins5585
      @gabecollins5585 Месяц назад +1

      Maybe even within the next few decades

    • @batshtcrazy5293
      @batshtcrazy5293 Месяц назад +3

      If we keep going the way we are now, I'd only give us another 100yrs. And that's being VERY generous.

    • @gabecollins5585
      @gabecollins5585 Месяц назад +2

      @@batshtcrazy5293 I agree

    • @HobbyOrganist
      @HobbyOrganist 22 дня назад

      Well think about how many times already in just about 80 years we've ALMOST had WWIII with nukes! so many accidents, including a missile silo with a loaded titan missile in it that exploded because some idiot dropped a wrench off the catwalk and it fell down and damaged a pipe that released the rocket fuel or oxydizer, and they scrambled to try and fix it, managed to lock themselves out of the control room too!
      Then there's the training plane that accidentally dropped an armed nuke missile I think it was in Georgia, then the Russian computer that had a glitch in the electronics which caused an alert to appear to show incoming US warheads! They were about to launch a counter attack when the glitch was discovered.
      The US army has dumped many thousands of TONS of deadly sarin gas, mustard gas, missiles, deadly chemicals, grenades and explosives in drums out in the Atlantic off shore, and they admit they dont know where many of those dump sites are located any more!
      Dumped in the ocean that's still there;
      The U.S. military dumped chemical weapons, including nerve gas, off the coast of South Carolina in the 1970s:
      The U.S. dumped chemical weapons, including:
      8,050 tons of poisonous gas bombs and mines
      1,507 1-ton containers of lewisite, an arsenic compound similar to mustard gas
      63, 1-ton containers of nitrogen mustard
      More than 20 tons of mustard gas bombs, projectiles, mines, and bulk containers
      The LeBaron Russell Briggs
      In 1970, the U.S. sunk the LeBaron Russell Briggs, a Liberty ship carrying 12,540 rockets of sarin nerve gas and one container of VX nerve gas, 283 miles off Cape Canaveral
      From 1964 to the early 1970s, the U.S. Department of Defense's Operation CHASE involved loading munitions onto ships and scuttling them 250 miles offshore."
      All that stuff is STILL sitting in containers that are rotting away after the now 50+ years in the ocean.
      It's only a matter of time before ONE person makes a mistake, one renegade nut, or ONE serious glitch happens in the US or Russian or some other country's devices or control systems, and there will be a major launch of nuke weapons, it's virtually guaranteed.

  • @zawadix9574
    @zawadix9574 Месяц назад +1

    Distances between stars are so vast I can't comprehend

  • @fumanpoo4725
    @fumanpoo4725 Месяц назад +2

    No matter how unpleasant, we must probe Uranus.

  • @OneEyedJacker
    @OneEyedJacker Месяц назад +1

    These artifacts will survive Earth and even the Sun. Amazing.

  • @3henry214
    @3henry214 Месяц назад +2

    LOL... I can imagine in the far off future, where all of our "space junk" and "probes" starts raining down on some planet, the inhabitants are going to being say "Who in the hell is flinging this crap at us??!!"

  • @beboboymann3823
    @beboboymann3823 Месяц назад +13

    I have been fascinated by the Voyager units from day one….they never stop surprising us. I have a weird sense of outlook I guess because I do truly believe that when our sorry azzes cease to exist, Voyager II will struggle on and be snatched out of the Heavens by the hand of God Himself who will offer a smile and maybe the words “welcome home little tired and worthy traveler”.

    • @Defender78
      @Defender78 Месяц назад +1

      I wonder if after all these years, how the finish and appearance of the probes has , does space dust and radiation make it fade, like a 1997 Ford Probe that has seen better days, with faded and rusted paint, and worn emblems? I know rust isnt an issue in space, but that's a thought which intrigues me. I wonder how many years will elapse to were the probes are all fractured and unrecognizable from strut, screw, and structure failure... any guesses? 100 years, 1,000??

    • @Chris-hx3om
      @Chris-hx3om Месяц назад

      The hand of which god?

    • @gregedwards1087
      @gregedwards1087 Месяц назад +1

      @@Chris-hx3om, The fact that there are so different many "Gods" believed by one species on one planet is an indication to how many "Gods" that there actually is.

    • @Chris-hx3om
      @Chris-hx3om Месяц назад

      @@gregedwards1087 No, it just means they are ALL made up.

    • @cjay2
      @cjay2 Месяц назад

      @@gregedwards1087 That would be zero. Just saying.

  • @rayceeya8659
    @rayceeya8659 Месяц назад +9

    If you ever played Super Mario 64, there's a rabbit in the basement of the castle. That rabbit is named Mips after that processor company.

  • @seaskimmer
    @seaskimmer Месяц назад

    Wow! Truly mind blowing. Still getting my head around the amount of years these machines have been travelling.

  • @maxvaessen
    @maxvaessen Месяц назад

    Loved the writing. Thanks for all your effort!

  • @tomsemmens6275
    @tomsemmens6275 Месяц назад +2

    They won't drop Voyager back until they detect a warp drive signature.

  • @jamielondon6436
    @jamielondon6436 Месяц назад

    Stories like these really help putting things into perspective …

  • @douglasstrother6584
    @douglasstrother6584 Месяц назад +4

    TWTA = Travelling Wave Tube Amplifier.
    Keepin' the downlink alive!

  • @tofunmifamuwagun
    @tofunmifamuwagun Месяц назад +1

    We need a video about the pioneer space probes , I know that it’s logical that the voyager space probes overshadowed them but it’s shocking how little they’re known about

  • @idahosixgun5601
    @idahosixgun5601 25 дней назад

    Incredible video as always! Thank you Mr. Curious Droid! This put a little bit of perspective into how small we are in the big picture. Mind boggling mind exercise!

  • @AluminumOxide
    @AluminumOxide Месяц назад +1

    13:21 “near the speed of light”? Radio signals ALWAYS travel at the speed of light

  • @dazuk1969
    @dazuk1969 Месяц назад +2

    I suppose if there is any life out there, at some point in the very distant future they might come across one of our probes and wonder where it came from. But it will prob be an Omuamua situation where they will say "what was that ?...ah crap we missed it"

  • @AndrewSternkern
    @AndrewSternkern Месяц назад +5

    I loved that tiny little Hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy reference at the end.

  • @werquantum
    @werquantum Месяц назад

    I’m 60 this year and these cosmic distances and time aren’t getting any easier to comprehend.

  • @JohnnysCafe_
    @JohnnysCafe_ Месяц назад +1

    Are the stars moving away faster than the voyagers can travel, in others are they destined to travel forever whilst getting farther away from everything?

    • @thebluelunarmonkey
      @thebluelunarmonkey 29 дней назад +1

      Depends on the star. The stars in the Milky Way, and the Local Group of galaxies to which Milky Way belongs, aren't expanding as they are bound by gravitational forces. If Voyager were to exit the Local Group as soon as possible, it would take 680 billion years. And yes, at it's speed it would never catch up with any other star or galaxy. It will be like a snail trying to catch up with a speeding train.

    • @JohnnysCafe_
      @JohnnysCafe_ 29 дней назад +1

      @@thebluelunarmonkey thank you for that explanation, yes I understand that now.

  • @AlanFogartyIRL
    @AlanFogartyIRL Месяц назад

    this is definition of content with a long shelf life! fantastic ode to this topic and delightfully comprehensive as always

  • @darknightofthesoul7628
    @darknightofthesoul7628 Месяц назад

    Sobering supposition--our technology in deep space will be the only legacy of our species. Puts day to day worries into crisp contrast. Brilliantly done!

  • @004Black
    @004Black Месяц назад

    It’s simply fascinating to think that about the time I was graduating high school in 1979, humans had the technology to develop probes with such endurance.
    Conceivably, the existence of humankind will have vanished into mass extinction and earth reduced to a cloudless, lifeless rock before perhaps some distant sentient civilization finds the probes and captures a glimpse of our greatness.

  • @DanSulyma
    @DanSulyma Месяц назад

    Always a pleasure mr Droid. Thank you

  • @andrewfrance1047
    @andrewfrance1047 Месяц назад

    It's always good to watch a video where I learn new things. Even better one like this where I learned many many things I didn't know I didn't know.

  • @4TheRecord
    @4TheRecord Месяц назад +1

    Short answer, we may never know what happens to them once their power dies.

  • @central3425
    @central3425 Месяц назад +2

    This is covered in Star Trek the Motion picture already

  • @whos1st
    @whos1st Месяц назад

    Thank you for your detailed breakdown of some of my favorite space explorers.

  • @Sutterjack
    @Sutterjack 18 дней назад

    Driod - I think you've posted this before but where do you get your shirts? Your style is as amazing as your content!

  • @Lekter
    @Lekter Месяц назад +1

    Very nice video. Thanks a lot for sharing.

  • @ZMAN_420
    @ZMAN_420 Месяц назад

    Excellent Video! The Voyager Space Probes are my favorite subject.👍🏻

  • @wicked1172
    @wicked1172 27 дней назад +1

    Very engaging and educational.

  • @kentbetts
    @kentbetts Месяц назад

    The ending was a startling perspective on ... us. Whoa.

  • @stevehenrys
    @stevehenrys 29 дней назад

    17:18 Like the Hitch-Hikers Guide To The Galaxy reference!

  • @Brautman
    @Brautman Месяц назад

    I had this question yesterday, thank you!

  • @randomthoughts9463
    @randomthoughts9463 Месяц назад

    Brilliantly done, my friend

  • @glenhughes8013
    @glenhughes8013 Месяц назад

    I always get a warm feeling when someone quotes Douglas Adams.

  • @10toMidnight
    @10toMidnight Месяц назад

    Excellent video and gentle enough for us non aerospace engineers🚀

  • @oldtimer2192
    @oldtimer2192 Месяц назад +3

    It might reach the restaurant at the end of the universe and the Great Prophet Zarquar!

  • @Thedudeabides803
    @Thedudeabides803 Месяц назад +1

    25 million man hours to make that probe? If the average man made $100 per hour, that’s 2.5 billion for just labor. Wow

  • @Erik-rp1hi
    @Erik-rp1hi Месяц назад

    That was well researched and Comprehensive.
    Thanks!

  • @1joshjosh1
    @1joshjosh1 Месяц назад

    I loved the way this ended.
    Nice words.

  • @gregedwards1087
    @gregedwards1087 Месяц назад +4

    It seems that Mr Paul Shillito is a HHGTTG fan, nice. :)

    • @CuriousDroid
      @CuriousDroid  Месяц назад +6

      I most certainly am, so long... and thanks for all the fish :-)

    • @nigeh5326
      @nigeh5326 Месяц назад +5

      Like me and Arthur Dent he’s British and probably grew up watching the BBC series in the early eighties 👍😃

    • @gregedwards1087
      @gregedwards1087 Месяц назад +2

      @@CuriousDroid, and another one, love it, lol.

  • @stratcat3216
    @stratcat3216 Месяц назад +1

    We already know what will happen: V-Ger.

  • @briantologist7629
    @briantologist7629 Месяц назад

    I picture a debate hundreds of years in the future. The debate as to whether or not to retrieve the voyager probes and house them in museums , or leave them on their journeys. Or maybe they will be destinations for tourists in some future travel agencies.

  • @realzachfluke1
    @realzachfluke1 12 дней назад

    I had no idea about the upper stages being on escape trajectories too!