Voyager Mission

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Pinned

    NASA designed the Golden Record using hydrogen to ensure it's universally readable

    The Golden Record holds what is essentially a human "time capsule," featuring music, nature sounds, and greetings from around the world. NASA used the radiation period of hydrogen's simplest transition as a baseline to convey timing and structure. The first coded image is included on the cover as a test so aliens can check if they decoded it correctly.

  • The Deep Space Network keeps NASA linked to spacecraft billions of miles away

    NASA's DSN is a global system of giant radio antennas that receive data from faraway spacecraft like Voyager 1 and the James Webb Space Telescope. It is sensitive enough to detect a signal as weak as a single light bulb from billions of miles away.

  • Voyager 1 captured Earth as a 'Pale Blue Dot' from 6 billion kilometers away

    On Feb. 14, 1990, NASA's Voyager 1 space probe took the farthest photo of Earth ever captured. Earth appears so small in the image that it takes up less than a single pixel out of 640,000 in the photo's frame.

  • Voyager mission's Golden Record captures Earth’s essence for alien discovery

    Housed aboard Voyager 1 and 2, each record serves as a time capsule of human culture and a peaceful introduction to any intelligent life. Even if never played, the records can outlast humanity and travel through space for a billion years.

  • Europa's deep ocean may hold the conditions needed to support alien life

    Beneath its frozen crust, Europa hides a salty ocean heated by tidal forces from Jupiter. This environment may resemble Earth's deep-sea hydrothermal vents and have allowed for the development of life over billions of years.