After 45 years, the 5-billion-year legacy of the Voyager 2 interstellar probe is just beginning

This article was originally published at The Conversation. (opens in new tab) The publication contributed the article to Space.com’s Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

Alice Gorman (opens in new tab), Associate Professor in Archaeology and Space Studies, Flinders University

On Aug. 20, 1977, 45 years ago, an extraordinary spacecraft left this planet on a journey like no other. Voyager 2 was going to show us, for the first time, what the outer solar system planets looked like close-up. It was like sending a fly to New York City and asking it to report back.

Voyager 1 was launched after Voyager 2, on Sept.5. Attached to the flank of each Voyager was a Golden Record carrying greetings, sounds, images and music from Earth.

The spacecraft were more or less twins, but they had different trajectories and scientific instruments. While both flew by Jupiter and Saturn, Voyager 1 then sped onwards to interstellar space. Voyager 2 tarried to make the only visit ever to the ice giants, Uranus and Neptune.

Gallery: Celebrate 45 years of Voyager with these amazing images of our solar system

The many-colored worlds

Arriving at Uranus in 1986, Voyager 2 mapped pale blue-green clouds and a possible “dark spot,” which was later confirmed by the Hubble Space Telescope. There was an unexpected magnetic field (opens in new tab), which dragged a corkscrew trail of particles behind the planet as it rolled in its orbit. Ten new moons (opens in new tab) were discovered, including the grey, cratered Puck (opens in new tab), and two new coal-black rings.

Three years later Voyager 2 reached Neptune and sent home images of teal and cobalt clouds swirled by winds up to 11,000 mph (18,000 kph). A slate-colored “great dark spot” indicated a storm the diameter of Earth. The largest moon, Triton, was blushed pink from methane ice and spouted geysers of frozen nitrogen (opens in new tab).

No spacecraft has been back since.

A computer-generated view of Neptune seen from the surface of Triton, using Voyager 2 images. (Image credit: NASA / JPL)

Messages to the future

Even more than these glimpses of the far icy planets, what fascinates people about the Voyager mission is the famous Golden Records (opens in new tab). A committee led by visionary astronomer Carl Sagan worked for over a year (opens in new tab) to assemble materials to represent planet Earth. The music garners the most attention as the “mix tape for the universe,” but it’s not the only highlight.

One of the sounds of Earth is the manufacture of stone tools (opens in new tab), or “knapping.” This is the most durable technology humans and their ancestors have devised, in use from around 3 million years (opens in new tab) ago to the present day. For most of human existence, the sound of stone striking stone to detach a sharp-edged cutting flake was heard daily in every community.

On the record, you can hear the thuds of stone against the sound of heartbeats.

In one of the 116 images, a Black scientist in a lab coat bends over a microscope, tiered earrings falling gracefully from her ears. The earrings were the subject of some debate: would a future alien viewer recognize the concept of “jewelry”? It was hoped this image, together with the photomicrograph (opens in new tab) of cells dividing in image 17, would help viewers figure out that the science of microscopy was known on our planet.

People recorded messages in 55 languages (opens in new tab). Some are ancient languages, such as Akkadian (opens in new tab) and Hittite, not heard on Earth for thousands of years. The most common words used are “greetings,” “peace” and “friend.” The Portuguese greeting, spoken by Janet Sternberg, says simply “Peace and happiness to all.”

The long farewell

Finally, in 2018, Voyager 2 joined Voyager 1 beyond the heliopause, where the solar wind is turned back by winds from interstellar space. Our galaxy is 100,000 light-years across, and Voyager 2 is now just under 18 light-hours away from Earth.

Both spacecraft send reedy signals that wend their way between the planets to the three antennas which are still listening: Tidbinbilla (opens in new tab), Goldstone and Madrid.

The NASA Deep Space Network showing the Tidbinbilla antenna near Canberra receiving Voyager 2 signals. (Image credit: NASA / JPL)

Before they can truly leave, the Voyagers will have to travel through the Oort Cloud, a vast, dark sphere of icy objects surrounding the solar system, for another 20,000 years.

Slowly, Voyager 2’s systems are being shut down (opens in new tab) to eke out the power as long as possible. But sometime in the 2030s there will be none left.

Even after Voyager 2 stops transmitting, it won’t be completely dead. The half-life of the plutonium-238 in its nuclear power source is 87.7 years, while that of the the small patch of uranium-238 coating (opens in new tab) on the Golden Record is 4.5 billion years. Both elements are slowly turning into lead.

The radioactive transmutation of the elements is a kind of reverse alchemy at a cosmic time scale. This process of becoming will not end until there is nothing on Voyager 2 left to be transformed.

Cultural significance

Constant bombardment by dust particles will gradually erode the surfaces of Voyager 2, likely at a higher rate than Voyager 1 because it’s traveling through different regions of interstellar space. However, its Golden Record should be at least partially legible after 5 billion years.

The Earth portrayed on the Golden Records will probably be unrecognizable even 100 years from now. The spacecraft and the records will remain as a fragmentary archaeological record for an unknowable future.

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While the Golden Records are endlessly fascinating, the true cultural significance of the Voyagers lies in their location. The spacecraft are boundary markers showing the physical extent of human engagement with the universe.

When the Voyagers cease transmission, it will be like losing a sense. Telescopes can only show us so much: there is no substitute for being there.

Who will follow in their path?

This article is republished from The Conversation (opens in new tab) under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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