The NASA Voyager 1 might be in trouble! It's the furthest space probe humanity has sent but is it finally time to say goodbye?
Пікірлер: 10 000
@Ganondorf775 ай бұрын
For a spacecraft that was originally designed to last 5 years and made it to 50, it's hard to say goodbye, but at the same time, we have all been privileged to see it make it this far. 🫡 I salute you, Voyager I. May you be discovered by life in the depths of space ✨️
@user-fy5yi5os7b5 ай бұрын
Salute 🫡
@aaronanderson88985 ай бұрын
Could be exactly what’s happening right now!
@markrichardson21195 ай бұрын
@@aaronanderson8898 OH yeah, There's a bunch of aliens waiting just outside of the solar system for the stupid humans to break quarantine, by sending our accursed and useless technology and history from 50 years ago in a actual physical package. Never mind the fact we been broadcasting for years upon years out into space our radio signals full of how violent we are. Cheese&Rice! Or JesusChrist! RIF a mind is a terrible thing to waste. You are proof.
@aye_its_karate61695 ай бұрын
I'm sure that a big hunk of metal, billions of miles away doesn't give a shit that a random person on KZfaq salutes it lmao😂😂💯💯
@andysamsung31404 ай бұрын
I wish my washing machine would last 5 years
@sfneurosurgeon4 ай бұрын
The technology when they sent it out was from the 1970s. How impressive for it to operate for this long.
@R4idenXS4 ай бұрын
Pretty sure NORAD is using large floppy discs too...
@jobe_seed66744 ай бұрын
Not really surprising The NSA released documents during the freedom of information act showing that they had computers in 1968 that had the same level of computing power that Desktops had in the 90s
@db50944 ай бұрын
@@jobe_seed6674 I mean, I'm sure they're using supercomputers now that will have the same level of computing power in desktops from the 2050's.
@EastDallasKicks4 ай бұрын
I wonder if things were made better. Would the same satellite being replicated today with the same materials hold up as long? Everything is made cheaper now but does that account for materials that company’s spend billions on. I’m going to assume not but eh whatever
@alienorificeinvestigation4 ай бұрын
Super computers sure, they didn't have magic processors. @@jobe_seed6674
@xxsmokerxx64772 ай бұрын
"Its Getting dark, and my battery is low"
@wilsonrisa23Ай бұрын
Saddest scentence
@abtahekhanmo3538Ай бұрын
oppy
@hollow1829Ай бұрын
thats from a mars rover im pretty sure
@abtahekhanmo3538Ай бұрын
@@hollow1829 yap
@paranaenselolАй бұрын
Would be even more sad if it actually said that
@WAVEZ396726 күн бұрын
I’m here 4 months later to tell all of you that nasa recently fixed the problem. Voyager 1 is back and I get to see my favorite spacecraft live another day. ❤
@IBBEHussain17 күн бұрын
Thank you for that update
@grantyentis550716 күн бұрын
❤
@GhostOfAces3 ай бұрын
The Voyager 1 will never be lost. Just missing in action.
@DaughterOfZaun3 ай бұрын
"Listen, Earth has been good to me. Time has come to return the favor. Don't deny me this. Tell 'em to make it count." Sierra Voyager 1
@derrickmoon32963 ай бұрын
Just fake
@DaughterOfZaun3 ай бұрын
@@derrickmoon3296 Don't think to much about it, I was just making a reference to Halo Reach. cause the original comment was making a reference to Halo. "Spartans never die, they just go missing in action."
@cliffdog20043 ай бұрын
@@DaughterOfZaunjust like a Spartan 🫡
@ThatOneAutisticCat3 ай бұрын
Doesn't lost and missing in action mean the same thing
@Vortex19883 ай бұрын
The fact that we're still receiving any signal from it is absolutely insane. It crossed over into interstellar space which has way higher radiation levels. It was never meant to communicate over that distance in the first place.
@macawlovers19643 ай бұрын
What if there is no satellite and its all just fancy video editing for a massively overblown budget and all told as a lie to deceive the public?
@maissikeskus91263 ай бұрын
In space radio signals dont lose Power ower distance so its not that amazing to have a signal
@richardarriaga62713 ай бұрын
@@maissikeskus9126There is still loss of signal strength due to distance and space would have some background noise.
@GrogedUp3 ай бұрын
@@maissikeskus9126 this comment feels so miserable for some reason
@O_XEO3 ай бұрын
@@maissikeskus9126youre probably just mad that it lasts longer than you do
@imoldgregg8Ай бұрын
The fact that we can send information to a spacecraft 15 billion miles away in 1 day that was sent 50 years ago is mind-blowing and beautiful.
@aesthetic8780Ай бұрын
I think it's mind-blowing that it takes 1 day! I would expect less. I thought maximum a few hours.
@katzlover321Ай бұрын
@@aesthetic8780 I would have thought longer than 1 day
@srisiddhartha2933Ай бұрын
The reason is that those radiowaves travel at the speed of light which makes it quick. A more mind blowing fact would be how we are able to aim both of them at a certain point in space billions of kms away
@aesthetic8780Ай бұрын
@@katzlover321 Speed of light is pretty fast my friend!
@aesthetic8780Ай бұрын
@@srisiddhartha2933 that's right. It's all about precision in space! It's really mind blowing
@matthewsmoak284327 күн бұрын
April 2024 Update: The glitch is fixed.
@larryhobgood63664 ай бұрын
"Have you tried turning it off and turning it on again?" -All IT guys
@michaelsorensen75674 ай бұрын
"is it plugged in?"
@dannyrivers39224 ай бұрын
Dammit yeah! "Did you turn it on?"
@hm09235nd4 ай бұрын
solves 90% of cases lol (incl. static reset/discharge)
@blownaway43714 ай бұрын
💥🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@JOEAPPLE0074 ай бұрын
Have you tried holding the reset button for 30 seconds??
@plxton4 ай бұрын
No matter what happens, Voyager 1 will always be doing its sole purpose
@The-Average-Noob4 ай бұрын
"To boldly go, where no one has gone before."
@TheRealZombieWizard4 ай бұрын
Voyager 1 mission plan: To try to contact earth for eternity after it can no longer receive signals from earth. Doomed to endlessly wander space with a task that can never be completed until total power failure and it dies.
@jimireynoldsmusic3 ай бұрын
It had multiple missions though..it performed flyby analysis of Jupiter, Saturn and Titan…they built and attached equipment specifically for purposes other than reaching interstellar space and carrying the golden record
@timmie10133 ай бұрын
@@TheRealZombieWizarduntil one day, 200 years from now, when we get a signal back from it. And it’s on its way back to earth. But the signal we get, suggest something has manipulated it.
@dattarsandhar62703 ай бұрын
@@zbr2246 Nooooo😢😭😥😓
@savagegecko45753 ай бұрын
If Voyager 1 was to be sent out of earth today. Every time NASA was to communicate with Voyager, they would have to watch an unskipable ad on youtube, and it would start glitching around moon distance.
@reelmsy38312 ай бұрын
HAHAHAH
@BEST_ALEX2 ай бұрын
NASA has premium mode
@pepepls6660Ай бұрын
And start complaining about why it was named voyager when it's clearly a male patriarchal name and it is infact non binary
@chrisk1458Ай бұрын
@@pepepls6660actually computers are always binary. Laughs in 01011100011101
@katzlover321Ай бұрын
@@pepepls6660 which is ironic since it communicates with Binary
@BugelaaАй бұрын
Technology then: I am durable af Technology now: won't work for no reason
@pillow61225 күн бұрын
They done made that Temu technology 😔
@williamfrankland537116 күн бұрын
F
@TheAcadianGuy5 ай бұрын
40+ years of service is quite an achievement by itself
@Nill7574 ай бұрын
It’s not useful service. Was space junk long ago. Lots of gadgets gizmos more than 40 yo in closets right here, but they don’t get clik bait videos
@AlfieArmani4 ай бұрын
@@Nill757the photos voyager took were very useful in futhering our understanding of space and our solar system. What crack do you smoke
@markussakkinen78784 ай бұрын
@@Nill757 Probably the same crack that the funny moustache guy smoked
@KaihanDTuna4 ай бұрын
@@Nill757 Junk? Yo parent raised a junk.
@Nill7574 ай бұрын
@@AlfieArmani Yes they were useful photos of outer planets 30 years ago. Now, it’s space junk to fluff budgets. Look at this pathetic bling, “V1 might be dying!”, oh no. And my 1/4 panel is rusting. Get a grip and pack up your Trek uniform.
@joggingscissors6324 ай бұрын
15 billion miles? And my new phone STILLdrops calls in the elevator.
@Error-dq9wf4 ай бұрын
Smartphone companies could easily create an EXTREMELY powerful phone, but those phones are secret because they gotta make money off the crappier versions first and eventually they will start selling those extremely good ones
@raulpetrascu26964 ай бұрын
@@Error-dq9wfthe phone in your hand is 14 billion times more powerful than any of the technology used for Voyager 1. It's just that they're tracking it with those massive antennas in the desert, your phone's antenna is a little piece of wire a few inches long. See what happens if you put steel elevator doors in the way, tons of wave interference and encase them in concrete to the same proportion as to your phone what their reception will be... Idk about you but I like not having to fit a 70 meter diameter antenna in my pocket to at most call my mom a few hours away. But when I know someone 15 billion miles out in the void I need to talk to I'll concede that you have a point bro
@Mandy7D74 ай бұрын
Do you not understand how small a cell phone antenna is? And all it has to go through in an elevator? They use MASSIVE satellite/antenna to catch the very tiny amount of info we get from Voyager now. It has nothing to do with cell phone makers wanting to make money off of garbage. It would be unsafe for us to have that powerful of an antenna (and it's size would be massive) onto a little phone.@@Error-dq9wf
@Mandy7D74 ай бұрын
You put it much better than I did! Exactly! Why some people have to go to everything being a conspiracy is so obnoxious.@@raulpetrascu2696
@StaryBrudnyLis1874 ай бұрын
Dude in Germany it drops if you get under some wooden roof
@MortimerMouse2.02 ай бұрын
Only times I feel sad about space is when we send a robot, serves well, and never comes back...
@nobyra2 ай бұрын
voyager: Im scared. Nasa: must be a glitch.
@beaksters4 ай бұрын
The Voyager one is probably one of the most deserving items to be in a museum, that just never will.
@nekhumonta4 ай бұрын
Maybe millions of years from now it will be displayed in an alien museum.
@scholaroftheworldalternatehist4 ай бұрын
It will last far longer in space than on earth
@luichinplaystation6104 ай бұрын
Never say never
@JunkerFunker34 ай бұрын
@@luichinplaystation610that’s literally the third fastest man-made objects ever created (over 62 thousand ilometres per hour) good luck catching up to it
@astranix01984 ай бұрын
*laughs in Trazyn*
@kenshinbattousai3744 ай бұрын
We saw it leave the heliosphere. That's already an absolutely insane achievement for a spacecraft that was designed to a 5 year spec.
@nightcoregirlprinzeugen72344 ай бұрын
It was a tool that was utilized by your government to deceive the public. Good riddance!
@shivamkumarshrivastava51824 ай бұрын
Wait... what happens after the heliosphere?
@AdrianRolland4 ай бұрын
You leave the solar system and enter outer space.
@shivamkumarshrivastava51824 ай бұрын
@@AdrianRollandDamn. I thought leaving earth's gravitational influence was called outer space.
@AdrianRolland4 ай бұрын
@@shivamkumarshrivastava5182 Anything inside the star influense is not outerspace, outerspace means to float outside the influence of a star.
@BaoloBossi2 ай бұрын
Voyager 1 would have still died in 2025 becuase of the onboard generator and, in fact, NASA disabled all the main funtionalities of the craft to use as little energy as possible. Still impressive that it lasted so long though, it was planned to be a 5-year-mission in 1977
@zhet2 ай бұрын
Hearing these news is like hearing a loved person fading away. We've known and loved the Voyager 1 so much!
@damjan0004 ай бұрын
Maybe Matthew McConaughey is trying to tell us something
@Brash_Candicoot4 ай бұрын
Lmao😂
@HomeDefender304 ай бұрын
It says “stay!”
@ezrathecool4 ай бұрын
It says "alright"
@JnManuelAG4 ай бұрын
Lmao it says: "they are coming for you"
@Bzorlan4 ай бұрын
@@HomeDefender30 😢
@anthonyc50394 ай бұрын
In 50-100 years, someone will catch up to Voyager, and it will be listed on EBay.
@simonpetrikov39924 ай бұрын
As a nft
@ddoubleg4 ай бұрын
Fr 😂😂😅……
@Guhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh4 ай бұрын
Scrooge mcduck ass plot😭😭😭
@tylerlyons60384 ай бұрын
😂
@Mr_Mufin4 ай бұрын
@@Guhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh😭
@roosts204123 ай бұрын
Some context here- Jimmy Carter was the president when the Voyagers were launched, and the golden record is an actual phonograph record. Our salutes shouldn’t be directed to a spacecraft, but to the thousands of men and women that came up with the idea, designed, built, launched and, to this day, communicate with it (or try to). Most of all, to Carl Sagan, whose infectious curiosity and boundless optimism inspired the people who made it happen. We miss you, Dr. Sagan!
@idkchocolateАй бұрын
It should be directed to the spacecraft as well. It's been doing an amazing job these last 50 years
@rmx4087Ай бұрын
You lost me when I saw Sagan's name. His legacy is the woke $hit we're dealing with right now.
@roosts20412Ай бұрын
@@rmx4087 I honestly have no idea what woke s-- you are talking about. Sagan passed away in 1996, when the word “woke” still meant “to arouse from sleep”. His main political activities were related to nuclear disarmament, which led to agreements that have kept us from blowing ourselves off the face of the earth for the past 50 years. What specifically did he say or do that you find so offensive?
@tacticalmattress25 күн бұрын
@@rmx4087what're you even talking about. Dude has nothing to do with that.
@tacticalmattress25 күн бұрын
@@rmx4087 The woke comes from hollyweird and the weirdos in our governments. Media. Generally not scientists or people who study science. You'll be hard pressed to find a scientist who is passionate about their study, that believes in any of this woke fallacy pertaining to gender. They are liable to defend basic biological science and confirm its authenticity.
@HKSlapActual3 ай бұрын
I worked on PCBs for NASA and I can confirm a phenomenon called Tin Whiskers where the solder in the boards will start to “grow” whiskers of crystalline metal causing shorts on conductive surfaces
@mzflighter69052 ай бұрын
Yes, they must have used LEAD FREE solder for SPACE in the 70s. Bro, 100% legit
@HKSlapActual2 ай бұрын
@@mzflighter6905 a lot of aerospace companies are using lead free now to comply with RoHs but mil-spec doesn’t give a shit lol 😂
@acidylaemon9443Ай бұрын
bro, 865 millions dollar for the voyager program?....this 50 yr are just wrong. Nasa is a scam.
@Firetick7-88624 ай бұрын
Just send some guy up there with a toolbox.
@butterboxx4 ай бұрын
buzz lightyear
@francoisdvanderwesthuizen67724 ай бұрын
A diesel mechanic with a few packs of cigarettes and a few cases of beer and it will be fixed by tomorrow...😂
@MyNames_554 ай бұрын
He's right behind the cameraman
@timmy68904 ай бұрын
Good idea
@bluntstone28284 ай бұрын
*sigh* I'll get my ladder...
@YS-ms6cw3 ай бұрын
I am a software engineer and debugging a code when there are glitches is one of the most frustrating things we do. I can only imagine how frustrating it would get for the engineers at NASA when there is a Latency of 1 day.
@TeraGreene13 ай бұрын
Right?! 😅
@chiefbobdavis993 ай бұрын
Ya gotta wait 2 days to see the results. 1 out 1 back.
@piroko133 ай бұрын
I don’t think it’s a software issue. The hardware is so old something must be failing and that’s what causing the glitch. If it was software related it wouldn’t be showing up 50 years later
@YS-ms6cw3 ай бұрын
@@piroko13 Yes most likely… but even if there is hardware issue they will need to debug the software to see where the issue is coming from exactly and if there is any workaround for that.
@rodrigoroa67533 ай бұрын
Way to make this about yourself, narcissism much?
@lynch42oАй бұрын
The older I get the more I realize that all good things must come to an end eventually… nothing last forever.
@ericesquivel54853 ай бұрын
They can communicate with this thing 15 billion miles away and yet we can't get cell phone service in the mountains😂😂😂😂
@johnsandoval21584 ай бұрын
V-ger : " runrunrunrunrunrunrunrun...." NASA: " damn. Must be broken. "
@OldManPhil4 ай бұрын
Aliens: “What?”
@andaltargren90154 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@udomabasiekeme4 ай бұрын
Ayo what 😂😂
@BlvkTonygaming4 ай бұрын
That’s horrifying omg 😂
@eageraurora8794 ай бұрын
Fam run where to? We is stuck on here lol.
@TheDwightMamba3 ай бұрын
50 years to travel less than a light-day. Space is so big!
@charlesmandus5743 ай бұрын
Why do you think they call it "space?" It is huge and there is a lot of it. ;)
@TheDwightMamba3 ай бұрын
@@charlesmandus574 agreed.
@outcastjedi44443 ай бұрын
This is why I was thinking that humanity, at least in the beginning, will have lots of space stations in the future. Stations orbiting Jupiter, Mars, Uranus, or maybe even Pluto, so that we can expand our population. Have stations floating all over the solar system. I don’t know if it would be possible to have a stations over something like Titan, or any of the other moons around the gas giants, but sure as hell would be cool.
@Brett333 ай бұрын
@@outcastjedi4444 Like the current interstate roads , gas stations and hotels spread out along the routes.
@Ner0mancer3 ай бұрын
That's what she said
@adhichandran73662 ай бұрын
Thank you, Voyager 1, for trying to send information about the space's biggest mysteries and helping us decode those. Its really sad that you are now forced to fade away. Huge respect!
@jsonstea2 ай бұрын
To grasp the distance: if Earth were the size of a basketball in New York, Voyager 1 would be in Sydney! Radio waves go brrr, it's amazing :0
@xaneth112 ай бұрын
Damn 😕
@valinorean4816Ай бұрын
really?😮
@8ex44124 күн бұрын
What
@conradvd72624 ай бұрын
Plot twist: The data it's sending is actually accurate.
@jdelacruz10584 ай бұрын
That was my thought as well.
@wesrehman4 ай бұрын
great comment, mind blowing.
@Mikelaxo4 ай бұрын
It reached the farlands
@zacharyreynolds43034 ай бұрын
@@MikelaxoSTOP that is terrifying to imagine
@Wroar2020s4 ай бұрын
But it's just a theory- Oh wait Mat pat retired
@undesconocido74 ай бұрын
Bro is carrying the entire human spirit on it.
@thebean64964 ай бұрын
Believe in the me that believes in you - Gurren Lagan
@Nill7574 ай бұрын
Entire human spirit? Maybe get out and meet some humans.
@kingjay33704 ай бұрын
@@Nill757 he is not wrong tho if we don't get off this rock that space craft will be the only proof we ever existed in this chaotic galaxy and it might not be found ever
@Nill7574 ай бұрын
@@kingjay3370 cmon. Get off this rock? Maybe take a walk in the woods. Galaxy will die too eventually. Voyager was nice piece of engineering by those who made it in 70s. So was a tree planted back then. Nice piece of marketing bling by NASA for budgets. Might as well be a gold neck chain. When I end that spec of space junk will the last thing I’d think about.
@karlwes62734 ай бұрын
@@Nill757bros really not believing humanity could reach type 3 one day
@rashmitagauda97243 ай бұрын
"Stand proud. You are strong." -_by a strong curse._
@willt7182 ай бұрын
V1's last message: "tell everyone it wasn't so bad"
@gwynbleidd968Ай бұрын
"I leave the rest to you V2"
@JB1L2 ай бұрын
Voyager 1: "dangerdangerdangerdanger........" Engineers:"why is it glitching?"
@frankkennedy63884 ай бұрын
"Repeating the same series of 1s and 0s over and over again" The Aliens: "Do you think they're getting the message?"
@jcelldogs4 ай бұрын
That would be hilarious if it was actually hijacked by aliens and its abord some spaceship right now and they sre messing with us 🤣🤣
@rubencid25754 ай бұрын
@@jcelldogsmore than Messing. maybe they don't use binary and they just send what was the last data
@yourlocalidiot694204 ай бұрын
the aliens: yea we probably shouldn't let them know we exist or all the earthlings will freak out.
@Loralanthalas4 ай бұрын
@@yourlocalidiot69420imagine rolling around space at light speed and being concerned about some animals that play with sticks.
@Mr.Ghost7954 ай бұрын
I don't think I've ever played with sticks lil bro 😂😂😂
@darthflipyap70404 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service, Voyager 1. You boldly went where none have gone before. Rest in Peace.
@izzabelladogalini4 ай бұрын
It's still "alive" it's just mute
@doodlebite38124 ай бұрын
It’s a robot
@fivesARC--55554 ай бұрын
@@doodlebite3812shut
@Banana_Banshee4 ай бұрын
@@doodlebite3812so are we, we’re just made of different stuff
@doodlebite38124 ай бұрын
@@Banana_Banshee the point is that it’s not alive it has no soul just screws nuts and bolts
@GarganoGambinoАй бұрын
Strange video; NASA confirmed they achieved a Software or Firmware Upgrade which corrected the glitch many months ago!
@jothera81942 ай бұрын
Nooo, this makes me so sad.. please Voyager 1 keep fighting! ❤️🤧
@TrayTerra3 ай бұрын
Even if we lose it, it isn’t lost. Godspeed little machine.
@rhananane3 ай бұрын
Godspeed you magnificent giant mechanical bastard (not a insult)🫡
@ShwappaJ3 ай бұрын
@@rhananane Soldier would be proud of the little guy tbh
@nobeltnium3 ай бұрын
IIRC that thing is as big as a van. It's not small
@bjornironsides64743 ай бұрын
@@nobeltnium In space...everything is small. There are stars that make the sun look like a pebble.
@user-hw1wb6lh6h3 ай бұрын
God speed 😢🙏
@LegendHimseIf4 ай бұрын
Respect to the camera man that followed Voyager out of the Solar System
@gratefulguy41304 ай бұрын
o7
@alexmaldonado7644 ай бұрын
I know right it's probably Camara guy buzz light year going into uncharted space.
@YurixYurii4 ай бұрын
respect 🙏
@Fatguyopeningfridge4 ай бұрын
Real bros a unsung hero
@Fatguyopeningfridge4 ай бұрын
Real bros a unsung hero
@mark89872 ай бұрын
I have an odd emotional attachment to both. They have been alone for so long. Gliding through space for us. Maybe because they peaked my interest as a child. Both Voyagers and Curiosity Rover hold a special place in my heart. I hope that when that time comes, and it simply a relic of our species. That we honor Voyager 1 and 2 with a proper burial. They've contributed so much.
@ethanfast63292 ай бұрын
It's an inanimate object get a grip
@ghoulbladeeАй бұрын
It’s so impressive that it outlasted its expected lifespan and the fact that it’s that far out and still able to communicate with it somehow is amazing.
@obviouslytom4 ай бұрын
Remember, in Star Trek 1, a machine race finds Voyager 1 and give it the tools to complete it's mission. And in Star Trek 5, the Klingons use Voyager 2 as target practice
@Scavenger824 ай бұрын
V'ger from the first Star Trek movie was Voyager 6, not 1.
@tobiasstritzke73784 ай бұрын
Klingons blew up a Pioneer
@logicplague20774 ай бұрын
@@Scavenger82 Yeah, they expected more Voyager missions when that movie was made.
@warpigs90694 ай бұрын
Lololol
@rudyproductions45574 ай бұрын
I’m still not convinced that it wasn’t the Transformers that upgraded V’ger. It would fit perfectly too. That would be perfect timing a certain young Predacon to find the secret message Megatron left on the Golden Disk.
@RetirededKat4 ай бұрын
In Elite: Dangerous you can find Voyager 1 and fly up to it, and it's distance from Earth is accurate based on how far it will be at that point in the future, always thought that was a strangely beautiful thing.
@colemanwalsh74773 ай бұрын
No shit I spent hours on that game and I've never knew that
@IAmValefree3 ай бұрын
Voyager still making more progress than the devs have made on the game
@macawlovers19643 ай бұрын
Or it was never ever a thing and NASA is just lying to you.
@nothinghere62523 ай бұрын
Delete dangerous
@SenseiJacksama3 ай бұрын
Yeah that's typical. The devs of that game pour all their resources into crap that 99.5% of the players don't even know is there and ignore everything else that actually needs fixing. That game can't die soon enough.
@mistermonkeyj16912 ай бұрын
At least the cameraman is still alive.
@Dark.Pri7718 күн бұрын
Guys, Good space News: They managed to get its connection back!
@DevilHunter553 ай бұрын
Imagine if everything we built was as durable as Voyager 1.
@link24423 ай бұрын
Companies would go bankrupt
@w.0.l.f.e3 ай бұрын
@@link2442good, let em. If they prioritize money over the health of their customers yeah they might make more, but personallt I'd rather not be hated for my lack of good contribution to society if I had the power to make one...
@Ospag093 ай бұрын
Twin Towers?
@bugcooper74413 ай бұрын
$865 million budget to build the two Voyagers. Thats why they lasted
@DevilHunter553 ай бұрын
@@Ospag09 737s? 💀
@Tenshihan-Quinn4 ай бұрын
Carl Sagan would be so proud to know Voyager1 was still running up until now!
@WizardofTechno4 ай бұрын
He would be amazed.
@AnthonySmith-sc4zs4 ай бұрын
I was gonna say the same thing. RIP Carl Sagan and Voyager 1. His “spirit” is on that spacecraft.
@anothernamlesscommenter3524 ай бұрын
Carl Sagan and all brilliant minds of humanity that work for the good of earth deserve to be blessed to an equal proportion of incredible measures as the good they brought to earth
@Chilly_Billy4 ай бұрын
@@AnthonySmith-sc4zs As a very opinionated atheist, Sagan wouldn't believe in a "spirit." It's good that he was wrong.
@pablo4yu4 ай бұрын
And people want to discredit america and our accomplishments… WE HAVE LITERALLY PASSED OUR GALAXY
@33Isaiah96Ай бұрын
As long as that record survives it'll always be working toward its primary goal.
@KenseiShiro2 ай бұрын
And here am i sitting. Unable to have my wifi reach the toilette
@litamtondy4 ай бұрын
Imagine finding Voyager 1 in some thousands of years, while exploring space.
@alikhansa70144 ай бұрын
Don't make us cry-
@seanrosenau20884 ай бұрын
StarTrek Vger
@enterprisethesylveon57874 ай бұрын
V'Ger
@janis_144 ай бұрын
@@seanrosenau2088yeah but that wasn't Voyager one or Two. But I get what you're saying
@seanrosenau20884 ай бұрын
@@janis_14Yep, I think in the movie they mention that V'ger is Voyager 6.
@JDogVids3 ай бұрын
The engineers did a hell of a job creating something that has lasted significantly longer than they could have ever imagined! Hats off to them and its been amazing to live in a time to be able to witness such an amazing engineering masterpiece still functioning!
@Jonathan-ob2fk3 ай бұрын
Well, planned obsolescence wasn't a thing in the 70's 😅
@epictetus34063 ай бұрын
It was back in the day before DEI hires, people were still hired based on merit.
@user-yh2kz6yd5m3 ай бұрын
I don't know....but I want to 😭😭😭😭😭
@crimbus033 ай бұрын
They were supposed to last only a few decades. But they extended the project several times cause of the condition the Voyagers were in. They have lasted 50 years. Its time for them to explore on their own.
@uasakuraАй бұрын
Launch over 50 yrs ago, to that far away, still operating, n communicating. Thats very impressive
@Ham8one0012 ай бұрын
I looked it up, and from what I could tell, NASA hasn’t given up just yet! They’re still trying to fix it! I really hope they do because it would be a sad day if they can’t get it back working.
@blackjovian94144 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service, Voyager 1. May we see you again starside.
@kiray2886_84 ай бұрын
🥺🥺
@Earlierfour4 ай бұрын
Guess it's time to send a voyager 3
@MrReddFlames4 ай бұрын
勝手に殺すな
@THUNDERCAT37c4 ай бұрын
@@kiray2886_8can we make love plzzz 🥺
@kroneexe4 ай бұрын
We’ll never see it again ever ever ever ever ever ever
@williamfied95004 ай бұрын
That thing has like managed to age 50 years in space it’s a testament to engineering that it has lasted and traveled as far as it has.
@erinbeaud45564 ай бұрын
It makes me wonder how long one would last if we made it today knowing what we do now.
@HariSeldon9134 ай бұрын
@@erinbeaud4556 Two days after the warranty expires, just like everything else that's made today.
@frostkiller2 ай бұрын
You’ve done well soldier 🫡
@thepenguinofficial2 ай бұрын
For all we know, it could be that an alien life form is intercepting the signals and doesn’t want us to find them…
@creeperinvasion68854 ай бұрын
I think the craziest takeaway I had from this video is that it only takes about a day to send information to a computer that far out, like that’s kinda crazy to think about
@fiercecamaross3 ай бұрын
Yes, it sure is. The signal travels at the speed of light -186,000 miles per second. That truly puts how far it has traveled into perspective.
@TheEvilPorkchop033 ай бұрын
also with the voyager being so old, i wonder if a new one were made today if it could do what voyager 1 and 2 have done but much better. Maybe they’d have made something better by now if it could actually be better and the current voyagers are already so far, or maybe there are other reasons. same thing with wanting to colonize mars, how come we haven’t tried habitats on the moon first? it’s much closer than mars and i think it is deffinetly possible with current technology. people could be living on the moon right now even though it is a pretty barren place it would be one of the most amazing things ever.
@tthomas1843 ай бұрын
@@fiercecamarossThat it's a mere light day away also puts into perspective just how distant even the nearest star is.
@fiercecamaross3 ай бұрын
@@TheEvilPorkchop03 Thank the US Government for it's criminal low ball funding of NASA for all that SHOULD'VE happened by now. I remember seeing a copy of Time magazine in 1988 while waiting in line at the grocery store as a kid... Title was " Humans to be on Mars by 2015" it laid out how to do it and what Nasa needed. I mean we put a man on the moon in just 9 years and that was just maybe a year not even of putting the 1st American into Space. Truly sad that we haven't funded Nasa the same way they fund these $60k toilets, $25k screwdrivers, etc.
@philipzanoni3 ай бұрын
To put it into perspective. Voyager 1 is 15 billion miles away. 0ne single light year is around 6 Trillion miles. Many things in space that we look at every day are hundreds thousands millions of light years away. So basically voyager is just in our own back yard.
@thefinalkayakboss4 ай бұрын
"Voyager 1, come in." "Lezduit" "Voyager 1? You're not coming in clear" "LEZDUIT"
@rattlesss51484 ай бұрын
What's the reference here?
@thefinalkayakboss4 ай бұрын
@@rattlesss5148from high on life
@NotATarnished4 ай бұрын
@@rattlesss5148 i think the game that has a talking gun
@noveske.22364 ай бұрын
@@NotATarnishedif you're gonna comment at least give them the name of the game. Lezduit is a talking gun from the video game high on life, it's made by the rick and Morty people and is overrated as fuck.
@ezekielreed73364 ай бұрын
That reference literally brought tears to my eyes. Of laughter or sadness I don't know.
@_settgaming2 ай бұрын
Next day: Good news! Voyager 1 is fixed! Good ending
@h2oblivious2 ай бұрын
Be strong, little one, nust a bit longer. It was an honor to be able to witness your journey. May you rest peacefully amongst the cosmos. You shall forever be in our hearts.
@anirprasadd4 ай бұрын
I salute all the engineers and scientists who built and operated this legend 🫡🫡
@Bango92654 ай бұрын
It’s so old they’re all six feet under now
@Bango92654 ай бұрын
When the student beats the teacher
@haha_yes4 ай бұрын
@@Bango9265that's so disrespectful
@Bango92654 ай бұрын
@@haha_yes oh no did I make them cry?
@kushaliyersharma96884 ай бұрын
@@Bango9265 watching their decendants like you made them roll in their graves.
@henryarbaugh72554 ай бұрын
If it’s one light day away, then it’s travelled 1/1533 the distance it would need to reach proxima Centauri. Since it took 46 years to travel that far, it would take voyager 70,518 years give or take to reach proxima at its current velocity, the closest stellar neighbor we have.
@j9lorna4 ай бұрын
That's why we need fusion drives and hydrogen scoops... Ramsey I think it is called... faster you go, the more hydrogen you collect and fuse which makes you go even faster. Put it on a generation ship and we'd be there in a few lifetimes.
@slickrickulous60924 ай бұрын
Yeah by the time it gets anywhere we'll probably already be there.
@sumbuddy40884 ай бұрын
We have to find a way to get there before then so we can complete the longest game of catch
@aarondaniele41414 ай бұрын
Incorrect
@A.typique4 ай бұрын
It does depend on the currents apsis, but yeah around that
@Amogus9117Ай бұрын
Those 5 years old kid sleeping on bed after watching this be shitting on their pants rn💀💀💀
@Abdu_PlaysXX24 күн бұрын
‘B- “But how will it die..?” It’s a cameraman 🥲’
@fariswoi2914 ай бұрын
It's heartbreaking to be seeing Voyager-1's journey ending, but the fact it managed to reach this far at all is beyond impressive. You have done well, Voyager. You will be eternalized as a legend in astral science history.
@JunkerFunker34 ай бұрын
Oh, it’s still going. It simply won’t be able to tell us where.
@DarthErdogan4 ай бұрын
@@JunkerFunker3Yeah. He is a solo soldier now. Complete the mission Voyager 1!
@duckattak4 ай бұрын
What are the odds that it got hit by something and that’s why it’s sending the wonky binary code all of a sudden ?
@UndBeebs4 ай бұрын
@@duckattak Odds are definitely slim to none out there. Stellar objects (even just random debris) have a substantially larger distance between each other than most people realize. For example, Andromeda and Milky Way are expected to collide in the extremely distant future. But if humans were to still be surviving at that time, they wouldn't notice a difference except that the sky would look a little different as far as constellations go. That's because each object is so insanely far from its neighbors that it's a infinitesimally small chance that anything would actually cross paths at that scale.
@GermanTaffer4 ай бұрын
It is funny for me to see myself sad by this news too. But Voyager 1+2 is in charge of delivering me really amazing news. I still have the books of its photos of the gas giants. Thank you Voyager 1! I know it is silly btw.
@voluknite4 ай бұрын
shout out to the cameraman for traveling all the way to voyager 1 to record this event 🤪
@notfundy2404 ай бұрын
Unfortunately the cameraman can't interfere or he'll lose his powers. As such I request people don't attack him for not fixing it because cameraman clearly can't.
@johnshifler54393 ай бұрын
Hope he took a jacket. I heard it's pretty cold out there.
@ifsixwasnine10003 ай бұрын
@@notfundy240I don't think he's a qualified technician either...
@KingDomCame3 ай бұрын
You're welcome bro, it took me longer to get back.
@notfundy2403 ай бұрын
@@ifsixwasnine1000 he does have a phd in photography, videography, and cinematography
@liversinthefridge399425 күн бұрын
They fixed it! Turns out it was a malfunctioning chip. They reprogrammed it to avoid the bad chip and now it’s working again!!! :D
@ricardohamlin648319 күн бұрын
I believe they fixed this issue by rerouting the circuits responsibility to other chips
@officialinterstellarnews19 күн бұрын
Correct! I made an updated video all about that :)
@LokiDaHyena04274 ай бұрын
It's not fading into the abyss, it's going on an adventure beyond the final frontier. It is and will always be a monument to human achievement even if it goes permanently offline Who knows, maybe one day we (or another species) will come across it and see what data it collected
@LIJVHAZ4 ай бұрын
beautiful comment and true
@jurajokasa8344 ай бұрын
Lets just hope that something captures it and figures out how to restore its power and send a message :)
@WetbackNoSetback4 ай бұрын
Yeah we are gonna reach it in 2000 years & its gonna say “watch out for the giant ice wall in space, but we already wouldve passed the ice wall & observed all that it observed if we were able to casually bump into it out there
@royaltyfree96074 ай бұрын
If humanity ever makes it that far I highly doubt most of the information we could gather from it would even matter
@knightriding4 ай бұрын
Or send it back
@shlaugen5 ай бұрын
The Pale Blue Dot. What an amazing picture. If it truly is the end, farewell Voyager 1, and thank you for everything you gave us
@needmorelighteverywayimagi98684 ай бұрын
Nah man, in 100 years kids will take a field trip out to see where Voyager 1 is at and then come home and the course of a single day
@tylervalle34004 ай бұрын
@@needmorelighteverywayimagi9868not happening AT ALL
@bostonblaster4 ай бұрын
@@needmorelighteverywayimagi9868in space there is nothing to stop momentum the voyageur will likely keep going forward until it hits or gets pulled in by something
@needmorelighteverywayimagi98684 ай бұрын
@@bostonblaster Right as slow as it's going it's got about a couple million years before it hits anything unless a weird random meteor takes it out! But once they figure out how to warp space, ride wormholes or go to warp speed, lol I can see it being a field trip for a class to go see and learn about man's first attempt to touch the stars and then warp back to Mars or wherever they live at that point! I mean look how far we've come in 100 years. What do you think will be going on in another 100 years? I mean other than us destroying ourselves!
@ltpetsema8764 ай бұрын
@@needmorelighteverywayimagi9868it would be an amazing sight if that would be true! But coming back to reality you would realize that 24 billion kilometers(15 billion miles) and increasing for 100 years plus then times 2 since you also said flying back is an impossible feet to accomplish in 24 hours!!! Maybe not for a unmanned spacecraft tho I think if you do the math that would probably be to complex already but for one that can hold people comfortable is just gonna be non existing change! Like our math and science would have to evolve so much and find ways around the laws of nature
@10r7q11 күн бұрын
IT'S ALIVE YALL
@porticoman4 ай бұрын
Some JPL staff have been working in it their entire working lives. JPL have probably retired people who have worked on it their entire lives. That machine is a legend. It’s been a background for my life. Just out there, travelling through space and doing its thing. When humans aren’t being dumb, we’re doing some amazing stuff.
@abelis6443 ай бұрын
I was 18 when the Voyagers launched. I was so amazed by them. I'm 64, 65 next month. I'm still amazed and genuinely love those 2 brave little machines! 🥰🌠🌠👋🇨🇦
@jultomten37394 ай бұрын
The fact that we have updated Voyager one, with programmers skilled as f coding in assembly and fortran is just insaine
@foogod42374 ай бұрын
The Voyager probes were designed and built long before "x86" even existed. It's far more primitive than that. There arguably isn't really any single "CPU" on board the probe. It has three different computer systems (each of which is redundant, so it has two copies of each). The "processors" for each one are different, and were built out of discrete components, run at somewhere around 0.25 MHz, and have a total of around 32K total usable memory combined, so each of those processors is about 20 times less powerful and has around 50 times less memory than the CPU in the original IBM PC did.
@Kikker8614 ай бұрын
they didn't have x86 assembly. They had FORTRAN, but it was getting up there in age. COBOL, C, and Pascal were duking it out for top language, and most of the USAF used COBOL.
@jultomten37393 ай бұрын
@@foogod4237 Ye I was a bit dumb and hear assembly in a video and I must somehow have tought of X86 but you are right, i'll edit my comment, thank you
@jultomten37393 ай бұрын
@@Kikker861 Yep, sorry I was a bit dumb
@Kikker8613 ай бұрын
@@jultomten3739 You are far more educated than dumb. I tell people about the wonders of bitwise instructions and they leave the room.
@spaceninja3426Ай бұрын
Even if the voyager craft dies, it’s still got information about how to locate humanity so it won’t be entirely useless
@lordfoogthe2st9192 ай бұрын
Voyager 1, even though you are just a probe that doesn’t have to eat doesn’t have to sleep doesn’t have to drink and just kind of floats even though we may be forced to say goodbye to you we will never forget your incredible journey starting in the 1970s and hopefully going on and on for the rest of our lifetimes Your job may be simple people here on earth. Love you and again while you’re only a probe, I think of you as a long-distance friend someone who always goes on trips send you pictures of the places they’ve been you’ve made it so far don’t give up now eventually one day there will be one inevitable day where we won’t be able to reach you but until then keep fighting good friend safe travels and keep thriving WE LOVE YOU V1
@davidmurphy29033 ай бұрын
Voyager 1, you have been an inspiration for fifty years. You were meant to run for five years, but you've exceeded that ten times over. You have performed exponentially beyond expectations and have shown us things we couldn't even dream of. Respect. Onward and outward, Voyager 1. Godspeed.
@conwuzere3 ай бұрын
bro using the comment section as a hotline
@stillcoolnana2 ай бұрын
😢
@DavidSpearman-Unsung2 ай бұрын
Machines aren't emotional entities
@Lineproof2 ай бұрын
@@DavidSpearman-Unsung and? As you can see, regular humans don’t react the same way as you because they don’t have a block for a brain. Go outside and learn to be human.
@StaticCharge-cheese2 ай бұрын
@@DavidSpearman-Unsung Does that matter? Does that fact really matter?
@houdinididiit3 ай бұрын
I was just a boy in Catholic school reading about Voyager in the 'Weekly Reader' sent to us. I'm now heading into my 60's and I feel like I'm losing a friend. 😢
@andrewgillon27633 ай бұрын
I feel the same way.
@Rookiemist8k3 ай бұрын
Same
@charlesmandus5743 ай бұрын
I'll be 58 in July and feel the same.
@njdxnjdx3 ай бұрын
If you are a Catholic boy, and you are losing a friend, don't worry, there are plenty of priests, just waiting to be your friend 😂
@paulinegallo3 ай бұрын
Same but I’m a lady. We salute you voyager 1🫡. And it’s sad to think of it out in the cosmos all by itself…
@MrDaharris342 ай бұрын
My grandfather was a lead engineer on this just simply amazing what they made and how long its been working an sending data back
@joshthedisneydad5 ай бұрын
Well, I did not expect to cry about a spacecraft today.
@officialinterstellarnews5 ай бұрын
There’s still hope! Hopefully NASA can revive it
@Luckyhamburger1015 ай бұрын
@@officialinterstellarnewsdon't give me hope
@ya_boi_combocomboiii5 ай бұрын
what if nasa makes a rocket get voyager 1 back to earth so they can fix it
@Luckyhamburger1015 ай бұрын
@@ya_boi_combocomboiii I'm afraid that's just not possible.
@PaperCheetah5 ай бұрын
Not possible.@ya_boi_combocomboiii
@MarkusBrod4 ай бұрын
”Have you tried turning it off and on again?”
@mickymaxwell9924 ай бұрын
Yes and we checked the wire too😮
@klokateer43724 ай бұрын
The amount of detatated wam you would ha-have to servur
@backonpro56794 ай бұрын
I think it needs new batteries
@yesseru4 ай бұрын
@@backonpro5679 nah, those plutomiam battires can last quite a while.
@backonpro56794 ай бұрын
@@yesseru those ones should be fine. It’s the double As in the back that need replacing. Anyone have a screwdriver?
@gustafbstrom29 күн бұрын
"…hope that the golden disc reaches other civilizations" Or, hope even more that it doesn't.
@Bertg19822 ай бұрын
This is so sad I hope they get it figured out and back on track.
@jacobafurr48773 ай бұрын
Can't hold that against him. I don't wanna talk to anyone on earth either.
@TeraGreene13 ай бұрын
😂😂😂❤
@craigcorson30363 ай бұрын
Then why are you here, talking to EVERYONE on Earth?
@veiserexab14283 ай бұрын
But you did talked to us
@MessiahManiac3 ай бұрын
Us bro us
@user-hz8wr2kp4c3 ай бұрын
Wow you're so deep 🤡
@meer26903 ай бұрын
It will not be lost, we will remember this fella's contribution for humanity, fly high, Voyager 1.
@karlinakarlina44753 ай бұрын
It's only 110 AU from the sun
@SciSenkra24 күн бұрын
ladies and gentlmen... we got em back
@FireAngelZero2 ай бұрын
Voyager 1 proves that it’s okay to leave your computer on for 50 years and it still work… (with a few bugs here and there)
@crizman70323 ай бұрын
here's hoping it reaches Cybertron before it breaks
@goopy953 ай бұрын
May the golden disk fall into the right hands
@dosmastrify3 ай бұрын
Or cylons
@morethanmeetsi30623 ай бұрын
WAS THINKING THIS TOO, MEGATRON IS GONNA GET A HOLD OF IT LIKE THE CARTOON
@its999wrld43 ай бұрын
Cyber : bros thinks we are listening them Throws back 🥏Frisbe
@stormtroopertk42853 ай бұрын
@@goopy95yeeeesssssss
@barneystinson27814 ай бұрын
The damn thing launched in 77. The fact that it works at all is crazy. Probably worked longer than more modern stuff would too tbh.
@MrBendytoes3Ай бұрын
We should make a new voyager with the technology that we have now and send it in the same direction that voyager 1 went
@azkavanny3077Ай бұрын
we cant. the planet is still not alligend yet
@fizbinsfire3 күн бұрын
What's astonishing is being able to fix something that far away meanwhile we can't fix shit right here on earth.
@terminusest91794 ай бұрын
Salute to the project that NASA has been upkeeping for well nearly 50 years. The day it dies is the day those who worked on it will be immortalised.
@fawkesandhound4 ай бұрын
Of all the human achievements, Voyager 1 always fascinated me. When I was a kid I found a book about Voyager and watched Carl Sagan on Cosmos and he spoke almost poetically about Voyager and the Golden Record. To me that’s the most beautiful part, this record of humanity, that will outlive us, outlive our planet and our sun. He said it was like a message in a bottle, tossed out into the cosmic ocean, into a sea of stars, so that one day, hopefully, someone will know, we were here. “To the makers of music - all worlds, all times.” Godspeed Voyager.
@misterycryptowhoknows80174 ай бұрын
All of human achievements??? Just say white people. Maybe Chinese and Japanese to but that's it
@vqsxd4 ай бұрын
It may feel hopeless this way, the bottle adrift, but there is hope. May one day we may go and retrieve Voyager, when the golden city descends from above
@ivanov0934 ай бұрын
Thanks for this post. I looked up what Carl Sagan said. It was beautiful.
@AngelLopez-ps7jm2 ай бұрын
This is kinda beautifully poetic
@weldin2 ай бұрын
Makes for a neat sci-fi scenario where the glitch is actually an alien message
@anjangakuan59593 ай бұрын
50 year old tech and only now showing its end. Meanwhile on earth, we are struggling to keep a phone working for a full year
@FirstnameLastname-wo2zq2 ай бұрын
They don't struggle to make a phone work for a year. They obviously make them cheap to make you buy more phones
@germancrisci2 ай бұрын
It's called planned obsolescence
@chuuuchchuuuch5612 ай бұрын
Gotta keep making $ to make more voyager 1s
@dark-cn9yq2 ай бұрын
This was made when we made things to last and not break within a few years.
@shizukagozen7772 ай бұрын
Speak for yourself: my first smartphone lasted for 6 years and it still works today just that I can't update the apps but I can still use it, it works perfectly and it was never broken once.
@_MIKIMOTO_4 ай бұрын
Could you imagine the things Voyager 1 has seen throughout its life course and the view it has currently mind blowing
@R462venom4 ай бұрын
A whole lot of black probably
@_MIKIMOTO_4 ай бұрын
@@R462venom yup
@foogod42374 ай бұрын
@@R462venom Well, realistically, it can see a much brighter night sky than we can down here on Earth (no atmosphere or light pollution getting in the way). It's presumably surrounded by a truly beautiful panorama of stars, galaxies, and nebulae in all directions, with absolutely nothing to obstruct its view of the entire (visible) universe. But then all its cameras have also been turned off for a long time now (and even the software to control them has been removed from Voyager's memory banks). For the past 34 years or so, it's been travelling quietly through the void with its eyes shut so tight that it doesn't even remember how to use them anymore, not seeing anything at all...
@comicnerd101A3 ай бұрын
"I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhäuser Gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die..."