Voyager 1 travels roughly one million miles (1.6 million kilometers) a day.
Voyager's greeting to the universe is a phonograph record.
1 posted on
11/05/2003 7:31:04 PM PST by
yonif
To: yonif
Where no one has gone before bump.
To: yonif
Messages from Jimmy Carter and Kurt Waldheim... If that doesn't convince ET that there's no intelligent life here, then nothing will.
3 posted on
11/05/2003 7:36:51 PM PST by
Redcloak
(Is this thing on?)
To: yonif
It was launched by the United States of America.
4 posted on
11/05/2003 7:41:40 PM PST by
libsrscum
To: yonif
...Voyager's greeting to the universe is a phonograph record.
Many people on Earth wouldn't recognize a phonograph record.
5 posted on
11/05/2003 7:51:32 PM PST by
opbuzz
To: yonif
great. aliens will judge us based on a peanut farmer and a nazi. good idea nas-holes.
6 posted on
11/05/2003 7:57:29 PM PST by
isom35
To: yonif
Maybe that's what's caused the sun to be so pissed off lately with its eruptions, passing gas, and all.
8 posted on
11/05/2003 9:43:10 PM PST by
dc-zoo
To: yonif
I think it is an early version of the CD. i think they stored pictures on it too. The early ones were large, like the laser disks for home viewing.
Actually, I vaguely remember something like a laser disk/ CD was used for the "super slo-mo" replays on the early 70s Monday Night Football games. I know it was not tape.
9 posted on
11/05/2003 10:15:01 PM PST by
Wacka
To: yonif
Contrary to popular misconception, the Voyager 1 did not carry a plaque with print of da Vinci's "Virtruvian Man." Sagan wanted to include it, but this was the height of the feminist movement and they decided that it was not sexually inclusive.
Scientists devised a lame facimile which included both sexes for the later Pioneer missions.
I realize that these probes will of course never actually run into any intelligent life (the odds are better that every single person reading this will win the Powerball Lottery - Twice), but that's not the point. The plaque was a propaganda tool. It was included to spur public interest and imagination. Such missions are best left to artists, not scientists.
Leonardo was both.
11 posted on
11/06/2003 8:07:36 AM PST by
presidio9
(a new birth of Freedom)
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