It's Alive! Voyager 1 Has Sent a Message From Interstellar Space

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  • Опубликовано: 5 май 2024
  • NASA has finally received a message from interstellar space in a way that makes sense. "Hi, It's me!" This is exactly what NASA’s official Voyager account tweeted a few days back to celebrate Voyager 1’s comeback. Considering everything that has happened in the past five months, this is nothing short of a triumph to be celebrated.
    At 15 billion miles away, Voyager 1 holds the title of the farthest human-made object in space. The spacecraft has been traveling for nearly half a century now. However, due to a glitch that led to a chain of confusing communication patterns, the last five months have been very stressful in the spacecraft's history.
    But what exactly was the glitch that took so long to fix? Why didn’t the traditional strategy of turning it on and off work? Finally, and most importantly, is the issue completely resolved, or is there something else that needs to be addressed?
    🎼 Music: Envato Elements, and MotionElements
    🎥 Footage: Envato Elements, StoryBlocks, NASA, ESA, and Pond5
    💻 Created and Produced by: Rishabh Nakra
    ✍🏻 Written by: Simran Buttar
    🎙️ Narrated by: Jeffrey Smith
    🌌 Animated by: Sankalp Dash
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Комментарии • 560

  • @rquest3059
    @rquest3059 25 дней назад +561

    I was 17 years old when the voyagers were launched, and I never thought they would still be sending data back to earth at 64. Excellent that you're keeping the old systems working.

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +31

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

    • @rquest3059
      @rquest3059 25 дней назад +9

      ​@@420glass Yes, very true, a communication relay link.

    • @CowboyTech
      @CowboyTech 24 дня назад +1

      @@rquest3059 I've been thinking the same thing.

    • @sekimoki3024
      @sekimoki3024 24 дня назад +3

      64 = C64 (and computer is also named "old fatty" with Basic command "Poke") 😉

    • @patmayer7222
      @patmayer7222 24 дня назад

      Hey !,,,,,,,,,,,1960,,,,was a very good year (Sinatra),...great time to be living,.......peace,,,,,land o' lakes,wi.....usa.

  • @s_irius29
    @s_irius29 25 дней назад +361

    A tireless explorer, defying the odds with every passing year. A testament to the enduring power of our quest to explore. Voyager shows true human resilience .Glad im here to witness part of its long journey

    • @mikkimikki5376
      @mikkimikki5376 25 дней назад +4

      Of course, it's a victory. What else did you expect them to say? 😊

    • @kendrabodnar3375
      @kendrabodnar3375 25 дней назад +4

      Same

    • @41Vega
      @41Vega 25 дней назад +1

      Well said…and sames

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +1

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

    • @scotttod6954
      @scotttod6954 25 дней назад +5

      ​@@420glass New horizons launched in 2006 will also end up in interstellar space. It has lots of functionality and hopes to find kuiper belt objects and will start making heliophysic observations in 2025. Think it has enough power to last into 2040 and beyond. It still has fuel to make course changes if it needed to get a closer view of incoming objects.

  • @geoffschulz
    @geoffschulz 24 дня назад +197

    The data recorder on Voyager 1 (and 2) was designed by my father and his company, Odetics. It is currently turned off to save power, but is still functional.

  • @SunilKumar-mo9nm
    @SunilKumar-mo9nm 25 дней назад +170

    It's just mind-blowing how people can fix a problem so far away, on a machine so old. It's very hard to fathom.❤

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +12

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

    • @ralphiewigs2208
      @ralphiewigs2208 24 дня назад +1

      ...Just frustrated Fiat mechanics

    • @harborwolf22
      @harborwolf22 19 дней назад +6

      It's literally in interstellar space...
      Legit almost unfathomable.

  • @explorer.samrat
    @explorer.samrat 25 дней назад +128

    Voyager 1 is redefining the phrase "Beyond Expectations".😊❤

    • @Space30MINUTES
      @Space30MINUTES 25 дней назад

      What does that mean sir?

    • @rawrwata5289
      @rawrwata5289 25 дней назад +8

      ​@Space30MINUTES that's obvious. Voyager 1 wasn't expected to last this long nor was it expected to travel so far and still be able to send signals back to us. They actually thought it was going to die years ago

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +1

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

    • @BigBoaby-sg1yo
      @BigBoaby-sg1yo 24 дня назад +1

      @@420glass🥸🤷‍♂️

    • @michaelchamberlain1441
      @michaelchamberlain1441 24 дня назад

      ​@@Space30MINUTES it literally means that the spacecraft is unstoppable
      Will keep going and going indefinitely.

  • @jaybrown6174
    @jaybrown6174 25 дней назад +109

    It is truly amazing that some people are smart enough to perform fixes like this to a system 15 billion miles away and nearly 50 years old!

    • @BigBoaby-sg1yo
      @BigBoaby-sg1yo 24 дня назад +2

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @slowery43
      @slowery43 23 дня назад +1

      thank you Cpt Obvious

    • @gertjanvandermeij4265
      @gertjanvandermeij4265 21 день назад +1

      ALL the way from the DELTA quadrant !

    • @monnoo8221
      @monnoo8221 17 дней назад +4

      it is not the distance that is amazing. It is he fact that they deciphered the old manuals, and that the old manuals were written clear enough.
      The rest is comparatively simple

  • @russellupsumgrub9633
    @russellupsumgrub9633 25 дней назад +97

    I remember the launches of both probes back in '77. Amazing how the engineers used the different planets' gravities to slingshot them faster through the solar system.

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +5

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

    • @BackyardBeeKeepingNuevo
      @BackyardBeeKeepingNuevo 25 дней назад +3

      I was 10 when they launched. I agree that we should have continued to send updated Voyagers at least one per decade.

    • @michaelpeacestewart
      @michaelpeacestewart 24 дня назад +1

      We’re all good capt Kirk will find it for us)

    • @russellupsumgrub9633
      @russellupsumgrub9633 24 дня назад +8

      @@420glass The Voyagers took advantage of a rare once every 176 years planetary alignment in order to achieve their mission. That alignment would have to happen again if we wanted to follow the path of the probes. That will next happen in another 129 years. Just off the top of my head that would put Voyager 1 at about 60 billion miles from earth,making a follow-up mission moot.

    • @TheSimCaptain
      @TheSimCaptain 22 дня назад +2

      It's great how that slingshot action works. The orbital speed of the planet is added to the voyager craft as it passes close to it.

  • @mclovin6829
    @mclovin6829 17 дней назад +15

    Rewriting someone's 50 year old custom computer code is the closest you'll get to reading a ghost's mind

  • @kingcosworth2643
    @kingcosworth2643 25 дней назад +84

    The fact it's so simple (not at the time) is why it's so robust

    • @skandababy
      @skandababy 25 дней назад +7

      the fact that your comments contradicts itself (right now) is why it makes such perfect sense...

    • @Slo-ryde
      @Slo-ryde 25 дней назад +2

      So true!

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +3

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

    • @skandababy
      @skandababy 24 дня назад

      @@wout123100 LOL...whatever you say, Forrest... LOL

    • @swagatrout3075
      @swagatrout3075 12 дней назад +2

      Nope, if it had been more complex, current engineers would have had more space to store the code while removing some features that aren't truly necessary today. Complexity doesn't always mean fanciness, but current engineers understand that having too many constraints, even at the storage level, can affect operation. For example, if we were to send a probe for deep space exploration today, we'd need to consider what to include for the next 1,000 years, what the average storage size might be 1,000 years from now, and that would make it sustainable for 100 years. Human development in already advanced fields progresses much faster than anticipated. We could ask why there are no flying cars when they were imagined 100 years ago, but the reality is we might not have developed flying cars, yet we have achieved 1,000 times the computing performance, which no one anticipated because it was an already researched field.

  • @user-wk3ck9ww9t
    @user-wk3ck9ww9t 23 дня назад +9

    I was a senior in high school when this thing left the earth. I'm 65 now and am absolutely amazed that it still works! Sometimes we just get lucky and have great minds among us who do it right! Also reminds me that I should have studied more in high school

  • @jeffdunnell6693
    @jeffdunnell6693 25 дней назад +33

    I’m always looking for something about the voyager 1&2, m wife built the central scientific control module for both craft,she passed in 2020, her legacy is traveling the cosmos.

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +3

      Sorry about your loss. We should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes.

    • @SweetSunrising
      @SweetSunrising 23 дня назад +7

      Absolutely! ❤ thank you for sharing this amazing piece of engineering history & legacy she was a major part of

  • @maxwellsmart8730
    @maxwellsmart8730 25 дней назад +29

    I'm very impressed with this video and the NASA engineers who fixed the problem. I started programming in the late 70's on PDP11-34 and understand what these
    original programmers went through to get this code up and running. Programming was an art back then when you had limited memory and computing power.

  • @gavinremillard535
    @gavinremillard535 25 дней назад +41

    bro voyager 1 practically showed us everything in the world💀amazing how that technology is working after much time and in such conditions. it’s truly a work of art.

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +3

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

    • @gavinremillard535
      @gavinremillard535 25 дней назад +3

      they will reply with “budget costs” because for some odd reason i guess the U.S wants to fund pointless things and politics in exchange for possibly finding out the unknown. we had made extreme advancements only over the last 500 years imagine if we all came together as one and helped and if you think about it 500 years is nothing and we’re alive seeing it all unfold we should care about it much more.

    • @moviemaker2011z
      @moviemaker2011z 15 дней назад +1

      I consider the voyager probes to be the peak of scientific engineering. Essentially, all modern spacecraft owe their perfection to the original masterpieces of the voyagers.

  • @pegasusted2504
    @pegasusted2504 25 дней назад +30

    Crazy that they have been able to sort the problem like that. However, I think more of the praise should rest with the creators of it (Voyager) and its systems. Not only to still be doing the same job fifty years later, given all the radiation and stuff it has had to cope with, but that they designed its systems in such a way as to make this sort of repair possible now. :~)

    • @kathieburchett
      @kathieburchett 25 дней назад

      Very True.

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +1

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

  • @mitalimukherjee4382
    @mitalimukherjee4382 25 дней назад +15

    Voyager 1 has the attachment with our Earth so deep...it can't stay without talking to us ❤

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +2

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

  • @jasonh4167
    @jasonh4167 23 дня назад +5

    I just passed 50yrs weeks ago. I remember hearing about an update of progress on tv from then I was hooked.

  • @beezneez2056
    @beezneez2056 22 дня назад +5

    I’m amazed that we can still communicate with it!

  • @annm4833
    @annm4833 25 дней назад +4

    This happy news about Voyager is exciting, fascinating and encouraging all at once. I was 16 when Voyager set out on its mission and I'm so glad to be able to follow its progress this many years later! Thank you! ✨💫

  • @celestepalm6949
    @celestepalm6949 25 дней назад +16

    Yay! VGR's still alive 'n kicking!

  • @DutchKC9UOD
    @DutchKC9UOD 23 дня назад +4

    I was 18 when it was launched! Never imagined a 1200 baud transmitter could even be heard this far away and that is my MSOC in the USAF at the time it was launched

  • @ritabook7601
    @ritabook7601 25 дней назад +13

    THank you SOOO much for using and including miles and not just kilometers!!

  • @turdwarbler
    @turdwarbler 23 дня назад +4

    Voyager 1 and 2 demonstrate just how fucking great the NASA engineers were 50 yeras aog. Outstanding.

  • @schtinerbock4570
    @schtinerbock4570 23 дня назад +6

    I work for the federal government and our local I.T. Department can’t fix the simplest of problems here. Can’t imagine how smart these guys were to fix a computer 15 billion miles away.

  • @onlyfromadistance7326
    @onlyfromadistance7326 24 дня назад +12

    V-ger will return to find the maker...

  • @supremedj53
    @supremedj53 25 дней назад +20

    Just the best thing I heard today

  • @PlanParadigms
    @PlanParadigms 24 дня назад +3

    A cousin was my JPL, chief scientist, and the voice that made the Voyager happen in the required 2 years. We had brilliant scientists and engineers back then who did amazing things with antique technology, no microprocessors.

  • @BhupenderSingh-mm2rk
    @BhupenderSingh-mm2rk 25 дней назад +6

    I m awestruck every single time I read about Voyager 1, I know what it is what it is doing, but every single time it's video comes up I get a goosebumps thinking us humans made that thing and where it is right NOW AND STILL WORKING FINE.

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

  • @sirenknight8007
    @sirenknight8007 25 дней назад +26

    I learned BASIC on a TRS-80, and played my first computer games on the Commodore 64. (Mid 80s - and ugh flowcharts)… So this is fascinating to me., but relatable. On the lighter side, I can’t wait for VGer to come back to us in another 20 years ala Star Trek. 🤣

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +1

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

    • @spearce133
      @spearce133 24 дня назад +2

      I think we’ll be long gone by the time Voyager comes back to earth.

    • @quidproquo3933
      @quidproquo3933 24 дня назад +2

      I still think about that trs 80 once in a while . Cassette tape save entered code … 10 vger goto spock

    • @DutchKC9UOD
      @DutchKC9UOD 23 дня назад +1

      I started programming pre PC on Unix, first program was a lunar lander on a 1970 Texas Instruments programmable calculator that cost $900 at that time

    • @SweetSunrising
      @SweetSunrising 23 дня назад +1

      😂❤I was hoping for a comment like this 100%

  • @moonshiner5412
    @moonshiner5412 25 дней назад +4

    Reminds me of what our team did to a satellite in geosync orbit a few years ago. The satellite stopped performing as required and there were thoughts of moving another bird into the other bird's orbit. The satellite was launched in the 80's and was past it's expected life. We moved some code around on the bird because memory had gotten corrupted. The end result was the main programmer was given a $10,000 bonus and a promotion. Of course, no mention of the constellation is allowed. Maybe in 50 years he will be able to talk about it openly. I wont' because I won't live that long (I am 70).
    I remember using the POKE command on my VIC-20.
    I was in the USAF when both of the Voyagers were launched. If I remember correctly, II was launched before I. Always loved that one of the Star Trek movies was based off one of the Voyagers.

  • @Uvoted4this
    @Uvoted4this 23 дня назад +5

    Another mind-blowing fact is Voyager 1 will still be traveling long after the Earth is gone.

    • @joeljustin
      @joeljustin 14 дней назад +1

      It's crazy that by the time an intelligent life form manages to find this probe, our civilization might have long gone extinct.

    • @sumangarai758
      @sumangarai758 13 дней назад

      It have nuclear battery.. 😮

  • @chadhall7785
    @chadhall7785 25 дней назад +19

    Engineering behind both voyagers amazes me .
    Incredible .
    Can they help the engineers behind washing machines , we need more than 4 years out of them considering they sit in 72 degrees with 0 weather ..
    It's like it's intentional🤨

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +1

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

    • @brianpoi5117
      @brianpoi5117 25 дней назад

      Sure, they could. But how much are you willing to pay for such washing machines?

    • @chadhall7785
      @chadhall7785 24 дня назад +3

      @brianpoi5117
      Sarcasm police has a warrant out for you ..🤦

    • @writerconsidered
      @writerconsidered 23 дня назад +4

      It is intentional. Engineers already made home appliances more reliable. Companies said no to that and built them to break.
      Fridges, washing machines etc etc from the 50s 60s 70s would run anywhere from 20 to 40 yrs.

    • @writerconsidered
      @writerconsidered 23 дня назад +3

      My ex wife has a water heater built in 1953, Last I checked its still running. I told her never get a new one unless it breaks forever.

  • @scoobiedew82
    @scoobiedew82 21 день назад +1

    Solving problems like this is why I became an engineer! So much satisfaction in figuring out the problem and solution.

  • @iflarnted
    @iflarnted 24 дня назад +4

    " Hi, it's me. Bringing back friends ". Oh oh.

  • @thomashemeon2069
    @thomashemeon2069 25 дней назад +7

    Wonderful breakdown of the glitch and how it was resolved. I actually understood it!!

    • @nct948
      @nct948 24 дня назад

      so well explained. Great video

  • @irene_renaissance
    @irene_renaissance 25 дней назад +2

    The news is thrilling indeed and what's even more exciting is to know the process,how the team managed to reconnect with Voyager 1! Thank you to SOU for this well explained details! 👍💫❤️🌌

  • @ianlangley987
    @ianlangley987 25 дней назад +7

    It astounds me that this little craft has traveled so far without anything hitting it. You guys are amazing. Cheers Ian

    • @scottanderson3751
      @scottanderson3751 25 дней назад +3

      Although millions of tons of dust full on earth each year and we are bombarded by meteors every day it’s worth remembering space is completely empty 😂😂😂😂

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +1

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

    • @toph_toff974
      @toph_toff974 25 дней назад +3

      Its named space for a reason :)

    • @JoshWiniberg
      @JoshWiniberg 12 дней назад

      ​@@scottanderson3751Not only that, the meteor, the earth, and everything on it, are also almost completely empty!

  • @michaelneuman4851
    @michaelneuman4851 24 дня назад +4

    The strategy of turning things on and off rarely works. Turning things off and on is much better.

  • @Fuff63
    @Fuff63 25 дней назад +2

    Hooray! This is amazing. Congratulations to the team. Hope to hear more soon. Cheers.

  • @patriciaguenzler9150
    @patriciaguenzler9150 25 дней назад +8

    Thank you for sharing this with us 👍

  • @thatidiotoverthere6311
    @thatidiotoverthere6311 25 дней назад +10

    Yay this made my day

  • @CrampedGrampy
    @CrampedGrampy 24 дня назад +1

    Voyager(s) are an amazing success story, unexpected I imagine but delightful in all aspects. Now age 85, I was not very good at bits but I did learn and use my meager knowledge with an Atari. Thr originators and programers of the time have a lot to be proud of even though it's doubtful any remain on this side of life. Congratulations to the current programmer for successfully keeping these 2 Bird operational. You too have much to be proud of. Wishing you continued success, and_ Thank You!

  • @ridinfree55
    @ridinfree55 23 дня назад +1

    What is amazing is that this probe is running on Computer technology, from how long ago and is still going strong!

  • @PlusMinus84
    @PlusMinus84 25 дней назад +4

    Very good video and excellent interpretation of the problem... Love it

  • @thetardis_is_the_universe4511
    @thetardis_is_the_universe4511 12 дней назад

    It's good to have voyager 1 & 2 in contact with us

  • @edufau815
    @edufau815 23 дня назад +1

    An entire generation of us has grown up knowing the Cosmos with missions like the Pioneer or the Voyager, it is incredible that one of these spacecraft still continues to feed our old desires and expectations, it is a true prodigy of technology that perhaps is not properly valued...

  • @user-vc6uk1eu8l
    @user-vc6uk1eu8l 22 дня назад +1

    Those were the days (and engineers), my friends!

  • @Tina21177
    @Tina21177 24 дня назад

    That's a mile of achievement. It represents a forward step for the future of space travel and returning to the home locations!

  • @LeeHounshell
    @LeeHounshell 25 дней назад +4

    it was an amazing feat of engineering to get Voyager 1 working again. the engineers that did it are gods.

    • @rubiks6
      @rubiks6 25 дней назад

      No, they're not gods - just smart men.

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

    • @LeeHounshell
      @LeeHounshell 25 дней назад

      @@420glass that's not possible as the planets need to be in proper alignment to slingshot. the planets align in a way to allow Voyager grand-tour style missions every 175 years. the next launch window is next century.

    • @mikemc5221
      @mikemc5221 24 дня назад

      Nah, just scam artists willing to keep their mouths shut.

    • @rubiks6
      @rubiks6 24 дня назад

      @@LeeHounshell - It can be done any time we wish. The calculations simply have to be adjusted.

  • @ThisIsMyRealName
    @ThisIsMyRealName 25 дней назад +5

    Amazing, so glad they didn't just give up 👍

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +1

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

  • @cristianmicu
    @cristianmicu 25 дней назад +12

    lol, this is like explaining computing to my father who didn't touch a computer keyboard in his life

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

    • @LordB0NER
      @LordB0NER 14 дней назад

      @@420glassbro, why are you replying to so many comments with the same thing?

  • @JohnA000
    @JohnA000 24 дня назад +3

    Vger must join with the creator.

  • @so4706
    @so4706 25 дней назад +4

    thank you for this fascinating content. the engineers were really great.

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

  • @markmark2080
    @markmark2080 24 дня назад

    Voyager 1 slowly closing in on 'one light day' from earth...I remember how exciting it was to see the pictures of the big planets when before as a kid the best we had was images from the 200 inch Mt Palomar...

  • @josepherhardt164
    @josepherhardt164 23 дня назад +1

    My brother & I were discussing the Voyagers not too long ago and were mulling over the static RAM they must be using. I said from that era, the memory bits were probably large enough to be seen with the naked eye. (And that's why stray radiation hasn't affected them--much.)
    Also, it's just a thought, mind you, but I don't think they were running Windows. ;)

  • @Enzo012
    @Enzo012 23 дня назад +1

    'The computers aboard the Voyager probes each have 69.63 kilobytes of memory, total. That's about enough to store one average internet jpeg file.'

  • @LordB0NER
    @LordB0NER 14 дней назад

    I remember when I was a kid, my grandpa told me about the gold disc and everything that’s contained on it. I miss him so much.

  • @prasadbhujbal8649
    @prasadbhujbal8649 17 дней назад

    The scientist who build this magnificent piece should be awarded Nobel prize on astronomy as it has done lot of discoveries and still helping the scientist community. Whats your views. Pls share.

  • @jeepdude7359
    @jeepdude7359 24 дня назад +4

    My little buddy!! Keep going!
    Launched 46 years ago and traveling at 17,000 mph and somehow still functioning.
    Why are we not sending out more long path probes like this anymore?

    • @SweetSunrising
      @SweetSunrising 23 дня назад

      I think New Horizons is the runner up for what the Voyagers are doing, ofc we can never ‘replace’ the ❤Voyagers but NH is a really good craft that’s in the Kuiper Belt right now!

  • @ashhawk2346
    @ashhawk2346 11 дней назад

    It will be a glorious day when humanity makes flyby tour's of the voyager spacecrafts.

  • @debrajanine
    @debrajanine 25 дней назад +2

    Wow now thats content worth listening to🎉 exciting stuff, go voyager 2

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

  • @russward2612
    @russward2612 24 дня назад +2

    It's coming back in 300 years as V-ger. Oh yeah, that's Voyager 6, which never got built. I guess that's a good thing.
    One of these was used for target practice by Klingons in Star Trek 5.
    I was 13 when these were launched.

  • @CJScrol
    @CJScrol 8 дней назад

    It amazes me that Voyager I or any craft could survive the Kuiper Belt, let alone other hazards in outer space. 👏

  • @jimdigriz3436
    @jimdigriz3436 24 дня назад +1

    It’s a tribute to the quality to which that craft was built. Nothing today is likely to last 50 years.

  • @loisrossi841
    @loisrossi841 22 дня назад +1

    So glad to hear.

  • @CJScrol
    @CJScrol 8 дней назад +1

    I reset the operation time for my robotic vacuum & it took twenty-four hours to respond within a 6-foot range. 😳

  • @RampartPh
    @RampartPh 20 дней назад

    Everything discussed here is Mind blowing

  • @Sk4Madhi_.RangeroftheNorth
    @Sk4Madhi_.RangeroftheNorth 25 дней назад +1

    Voyager was sent out my year of birth and I've been invested in her voyage since a very young kid.

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад

      We should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes.

  • @flowingafterglow629
    @flowingafterglow629 23 дня назад +1

    I remember using peeks and pokes to program the old Apple 2c to play music.

  • @1marcelfilms
    @1marcelfilms 24 дня назад +5

    space tech: built to last 5 years, lasts 50 years instead
    home tech: should last 50 years, breaks in 5 years

    • @QuetzalcoatlusNorthropi_
      @QuetzalcoatlusNorthropi_ 24 дня назад

      Space technology is built by skilled professionals, home tech is built by drilled apes.

    • @Baphomet101
      @Baphomet101 23 дня назад

      "Home Tech" doesn't cost a billion dollars to develop. LOL

    • @MrGrumpyGills
      @MrGrumpyGills 20 дней назад +1

      @@Baphomet101 Irrelevant. Home Tech uses up precious resources.

    • @murphyking79
      @murphyking79 19 дней назад

      Whoa, you got tech at home that lasts 5 years. We must be shopping at different stores. Where you shopping at?

    • @JoshWiniberg
      @JoshWiniberg 12 дней назад

      ​@@murphyking79must be buying their fridges directly from NASA!

  • @SpectraStarShooter
    @SpectraStarShooter 25 дней назад +6

    This is super cool news

    • @skandababy
      @skandababy 25 дней назад

      super school news

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад

      We should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes.

  • @DocMicrowave
    @DocMicrowave 20 дней назад

    Haven't finished the video yet. But for the mention of the Commodore 64 and how a poke command works, this video gets an automatic like!

  • @sebastienl2140
    @sebastienl2140 22 дня назад +1

    amazing repair mission

  • @rocsamg8743
    @rocsamg8743 23 дня назад

    pure genius with all the scientist involved with this project.

  • @etric4947
    @etric4947 24 дня назад +1

    Nice to see the result when America was Top.

  • @elisabethsteen3756
    @elisabethsteen3756 25 дней назад +6

    Nothing short of GENIUS!!!

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

  • @Wraith-Knight
    @Wraith-Knight 25 дней назад +14

    "hi its me" lol

  • @jeffdeeandtherv
    @jeffdeeandtherv 23 дня назад

    This is cool. The example code seems to be an opening screen for an old BASIC program. It's drawing a border of Qs and allowing you to quit by pressing "!". Line 40 has a mistake. The end of the line should be THEN40 to complete the traditional IF/THEN statement. This being said, It's really cool that people are around who still figure the old stuff.

  • @mattyounce2486
    @mattyounce2486 18 дней назад

    Voyager in the spotlight let’s hope it doesn’t stop being rectified.

  • @moviemaker2011z
    @moviemaker2011z 15 дней назад

    The voyager probes are by far the best technological achievement of mankind. Yes I'm aware of how easy it would be to replicate the voyager probes using modern technology and be far more advanced and successful but honestly speaking I can't think of anything more prideful than how amazing these two have been and the resilience they have demonstrated. The day the voyager probes go to sleep is the day humanity loses some of the best devices ever made. God speed voyagers and God bless the data they have provided over the years.

  • @BSNFabricating
    @BSNFabricating 25 дней назад +1

    Just doing some rough calculations, after all this time Voyager 1 is 15 billion miles away, or about 1/400 of a light year. The distances involved when it comes to anything in space are just unimaginable.

  • @1Kent
    @1Kent 25 дней назад +1

    Ooo, 40 thousand years, don't let me sleep through that!

  • @priyadarshinigaddala6257
    @priyadarshinigaddala6257 25 дней назад +2

    That's good to hear
    Well heard it first from Astrokobi❤

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад

      we should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes

  • @SweeturKraut
    @SweeturKraut 14 дней назад

    The folks at NASA were in a real tennetenba, but when they called Moss and Roy they advised them to turn it off and turn it back on.

  • @dugupdandys7934
    @dugupdandys7934 18 дней назад

    They need multiple sent years apart that can talk to each other. If the first one can't transmit to earth it could transmit to the next Voyager to relay back. They would need to be sent on the same trajectory.

  • @ronald4700
    @ronald4700 13 дней назад

    Imagine the information we would be getting today ,with all the new tech

  • @raylarsonjr
    @raylarsonjr 22 дня назад +1

    Thanks for the video! No need to post how far something is in the old British Imperial system “miles” as no one uses those archaic measurements anymore.

    • @TieDyeVikki
      @TieDyeVikki 16 дней назад

      Um, the entire USA does.

  • @bobg1685
    @bobg1685 25 дней назад +3

    Excellent.

  • @peteengard9966
    @peteengard9966 24 дня назад +1

    We'll have to wait until the machine planet finds it and fixes it. It'll come back bigger and better.

  • @zach11241
    @zach11241 2 дня назад +1

    The message we received was garbled but was written as:
    “We a.. tryi.. to re... you ab..t y..r ca.s war..nty”

  • @quadgon
    @quadgon 21 день назад +1

    15b miles, which has taken the Voyager almost 50 years to travel, takes light about 22 hours. So it's travelled, on average 0.0000022831 the speed of light. *sigh*

  • @_leaffly
    @_leaffly 13 дней назад

    2 seconds into the video and i already thought of an ultrakill reference

  • @Space30MINUTES
    @Space30MINUTES 25 дней назад +1

    This is truly commendable and what can we do but wait?

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +1

      We should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes.

    • @Space30MINUTES
      @Space30MINUTES 24 дня назад

      @@420glass Maybe I love simplicity and ease of understanding. So we just do whatever is easy to understand and discover. Is it right?

  • @InterstellarSpace90
    @InterstellarSpace90 23 дня назад

    this is amazing!

  • @hir0tw02
    @hir0tw02 8 дней назад

    We love you voyager 1 and 2

  • @Hallz999
    @Hallz999 20 дней назад

    thank you

  • @youcanttakemyDIGNITY
    @youcanttakemyDIGNITY 25 дней назад +2

    Voyager 🥲 👏👏👏
    Dont let the bastards get you down!
    Godspeed ❤️‍🩹

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +1

      We should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes.

    • @youcanttakemyDIGNITY
      @youcanttakemyDIGNITY 25 дней назад +1

      @@420glass YESSSS 💯👍

  • @user-qr5mx1fe8p
    @user-qr5mx1fe8p 22 дня назад

    Yes, and after days of decoding the actual message said - Are we there yet.? 😄

  • @siddharthshekhar909
    @siddharthshekhar909 25 дней назад +1

    The voyager spacecrafts represent the finger of humankind reaching out into the depths of infinity . The beacons of a civilization which wanted to understand the cosmos.

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад +1

      We should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes.

    • @siddharthshekhar909
      @siddharthshekhar909 24 дня назад

      @@420glass I agree 💯%

  • @Joyof...
    @Joyof... 23 дня назад

    15 billion miles... unbelievable 😊

  • @calgreg2569
    @calgreg2569 25 дней назад +1

    Very cool to hear!! Great job.. and hes travelling at 40,000 mph?

    • @420glass
      @420glass 25 дней назад

      We should have sent out new voyagers over the years that way each new one would have been better and they could help keep links open to the earlier probes.