• SorteKanin@feddit.dk
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    26 days ago

    Absolutely crazy that it’s still running. Sad to think that it will one day stop talking to us and just float out there.

    • DogWater@lemmy.world
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      26 days ago

      It’ll be a monument.

      Every other monument we have yet made lies within the solar system. The voyager probes are humanity’s first physical journey beyond our home. It’s human curiousity reaching out into the cosmos for the first time. As cosmic infants walking outdoors for the first time. Even if we eventually pass them some day, they were still the first.

      And even more, there are plaques on them waiting for that 1 in a trillion chance to be found by a distant alien race. Long after humanity goes extinct those plaques will endure. Even if we can see the beginning of the universe with telescopes, those telescopes are near to our planet.

      The voyager probes could potentially exist in the future as the only thing outside of our solar system to prove we ever even existed…hell depending on how and when we go out, they might be the only things anywhere

      • Yondoza@sh.itjust.works
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        26 days ago

        Sorry to be that guy, but Pioneer 10 and 11 were the first. They stopped communicating in the early 2000s though, so the Voyagers are the only ones still providing scientific data about the heliosphere.

        • DogWater@lemmy.world
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          26 days ago

          Yo I thought the voyager probes were the only probes that have ever left the solar system that’s crazy

          Now I’m gonna have to look up YouTube videos about all of pioneer missions.

          Edit; I’m conflating these 2 probes with the voyager probes. The plaques in thinking of were on Pioneer probes. I think my brain has been mixing facts from pioneer and voyager for a while

    • Shard@lemmy.world
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      26 days ago

      Perhaps we can find solace in the fact that Voyager will stand as a monument to our determination for scientific progress, space exploration and technical ingenuity.

      The probably of Voyager crashing into anything is so incredibly miniscule that it will very likely outlast our civilization and even us as a species. Any deterioration of the physical craft in a vacuum will be so slow it will last for geological timescales.