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- Where are Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 Now? - NASA Science
Both Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 have reached interstellar space and each continue their unique journey deeper into the cosmos Use Eyes on the Solar System, NASA's 3D interactive visualization tool, to see where Voyager 1 is at this moment
- Voyager 1 - Wikipedia
Voyager 1 is a space probe launched by NASA on September 5, 1977, as part of the Voyager program, to study the outer Solar System and the interstellar space beyond the Sun's heliosphere
- Voyager 1 will reach one light-day from Earth in 2026. Here’s . . . - CNN
Voyager 1, NASA’s deep-space probe, could soon become the first spacecraft to reach a historic milestone In November 2026, the probe will be one light-day from Earth
- NASA shuts down 49-year-old Voyager 1 instrument to keep it alive
Voyager 1 just powered down a nearly 50-year-old instrument to stay alive in deep space The spacecraft is running critically low on energy, forcing NASA to make careful sacrifices to keep its
- Voyager 2 just turned back and CONFIRMS what WE ALL FEARED
After almost 47 years coasting quietly through the vastness of space, NASA's Voyager 2 has taken a step that has left scientists reeling and reawakened public imagination: it has turned around—or rather, altered course
- Voyager 1 will be one light-day, 16 billion miles, from us next year
Voyager 1, which launched in 1977 and explored Jupiter, Saturn and points beyond, will reach a light-day milestone in November 2026 when it becomes the first craft to travel 16 1 billion miles
- Star Trek: Voyager (TV Series 1995–2001) - IMDb
Pulled to the far side of the galaxy, where the Federation is seventy-five years away at maximum warp speed, the crew of the Starfleet star-ship Voyager must forge a truce with a group of Maquis rebels in order to find a way home
- Voyager 1: Where Is It Now and Is It Still Talking to Us?
Voyager 1, launched in 1977, is now farther from Earth than any other spacecraft ever built It is a machine born in the analog age, designed with slide rules and early computers, yet it still endures in an environment no human-made object was ever expected to survive for so long
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