Nasa’s Voyager-1 sends usable data from deep space | BBC News

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Published 2024-04-23
The US space agency says its Voyager-1 probe is once again sending usable information back to Earth after months of spouting gibberish.

The Nasa spacecraft is humanity's most distant object, being more than 24 billion km (15 billion miles) away.

A computer fault stopped it returning readable data in November but engineers have now fixed this.

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All Comments (21)
  • @JDBD13
    To be fair to Voyager 1, I'm not even 30 yet and I barely function.
  • @Manskilz
    Voyager. The Nokia phone of probes.
  • @splifsend
    45 years and it's almost 1 light day away - 65,000 years to get to Alpha at that speed
  • The computer on voyager 1 has about 68 kB of memory. It's amazing that NASA can still do cutting edge science with a computer that's about as powerful as a talking birthday card, even while it's on the edge of the solar system. The software engineers for the voyager program must be some of the best in the world.
  • @romeshbhat8362
    Billions of miles away and still sending signals And my bank's OTP has still not reached me
  • @yeahboyiiiii222
    In 2021 NASA put out a job application for someone who could program in Fortran 5. Some un named person took the job and here we are, they got a spacecraft from the 70's working again from 15 Billion miles away. Bravo un named hero.
  • @envitech02
    I'm glad they built it in the 70s, otherwise programmers had to click skip ad every they need to talk to Voyager.
  • @mosshark
    Incredible. This now interstellar spacecraft was built in the bloody 1970's!
  • Voyager 1: sends alien signals NASA scientist: it's sending gibberish
  • @JTan74
    V-ger trying to contact the creator. "So, where's it going?" "Where no one has gone before."
  • "what on earth is it sending back" nothing from earth I should imagine
  • @MS-lk4xc
    This is humanity's most distant object
  • I was 9 years old when the Voyager 1 spacecraft was launched in 1977, and I remember being excited about it as a kid. I will turn 56 years old in three weeks, and it is unbelievable that the spacecraft is still going and working!
  • @shmookins
    From Nasa's website: "It will take about 300 years for Voyager 2 to reach the inner edge of the Oort Cloud and possibly about 30,000 years to fly beyond it. Voyager 2 is heading away from the Sun about 36 degrees out of the ecliptic plane (plane of the planets) to the south, toward the constellations of Sagittarius and Pavo. In about 40,000 years, Voyager 2 will be closer to another star than our own Sun, coming within about 1.7 light years of a star called Ross 248, a small star in the constellation of Andromeda."
  • @joji_okami
    Your car's key fob has more memory than the computer on voyager 1. Imagine that. *edit: i learned that from the Astrum YT channel. shout-out!
  • @ivanlawrence2
    I love that the Dr's background has the new space telescope, dinosaurs, something about OCD, yoga skeleton, and a moose. Also, fixing a computer that has outlived it's creators and is also billions of miles a way is also cool.
  • @Jussle364
    Voyager 1: Golden record San-Ti: "Do Not Answer"
  • @bokami3445
    For those who are interested, there is a documentary called "It's quieter in the Twilight" in which you get to meet some of the scientists and engineer's who are still working on the project and the decisions they have to make in order for Voyager 1 to continue on it's epic voyage to the stars. Highly recommended!