What Did Voyager 1 See During its Journey Out Of The Solar System? 1977-2019 (4k UHD)

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[Music] in September 1977 NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft began its long journey into the unknown when it was launched from the Kennedy Space Center 16 days later than its twin Voyager 2 the probes main objective was to conduct close-up studies of the outer planets including their large moons and mysterious ring systems Voyager 1 was launched on a faster more direct path that would send the spacecraft hurtling towards Jupiter and Saturn while Voyager 2 would take a slightly different path that would also take it past the two gas giants but then on to Uranus and Neptune taking advantage of a rare planetary arrangement that only occurs once every 175 years within just a couple of weeks of its journey Voyager 1 sent back its first images one of which reveals a crescent-shaped earth and moon hanging in the darkness of space this incredible image was the first of its kind ever taken by a spacecraft and was captured when Voyager 1 was 7.25 million miles away from Earth on the 18th of September 1977 you can see the moon at the top of the image while a blurry eastern Asia and western Pacific Ocean is visible on our blue planet because of the direct path that Voyager 1 was set on it only took the spacecraft approximately one-and-a-half years to get to the first and largest gas planet in our solar system in January 1979 Voyager 1 began taking photographs of Jupiter during its approach and captured almost 1,900 images during the flyby this time-lapse records Jupiter over a period of 60 days and shows the gas planet swirling clouds rotating within bright bands exceeding any image ever taken of the planets from Earth incredible close-up images of Jupiter's famous storm the Great Red Spot was also captured like never before by using color filters the image reveals the turbulent nature of the giant storm plus large white spots that surround it as well as giving us a closer look at Jupiter's marble-like atmosphere Voyager 1 also observed for the first time Jupiter's thin ring system which can be seen as a faint band across the center of the picture the edge of the Ring is approximately 35,000 400 miles away from the planets visible cloud deck and the background stars in the image appear as broken hairpins due to the spacecraft's motion during the 11 minute exposure but it wasn't just a Jupiter that Voyager 1 studied many of the gas planets mysterious moons were also photographed such as the volcanic moon Io in this image you can see hazy details of IOT's hellish surface revealing ancient volcanic scars that are spread across the moon's landscape IO was the first world beyond Earth where active volcanism had been observed the huge plume can be seen silhouetted against the darkness of space on the outer edge of the moon by using different camera filters the close-up image also shows the moon's rich colors which are believed to be as a result of allotropes and sulfur compounds while the dark spots may be from lava flows or volcanic craters other satellites such as Jupiter's largest moon Ganymede also exposed its strained surface features for the first time revealing huge ridges grooves and impact craters that are spread across its icy thick crust [Music] after months of studying Jupiter and its moons Voyager 1 eventually completed its flyby in early April 1979 and continued on to the second largest gas planet in our solar system nearly 20 months later on the 9th of November 1980 Voyager 1 finally reached the ringed world Saturn this blurred image shows Saturn's dark and light bands of rotating clouds it's huge magnificence ringlets but also two of the gas giants mysterious moons during the flyby Voyager 1 also encountered Saturn's largest moon Titan the enhanced photograph reveals Titans hazy nitrogen-rich atmosphere which led scientists to theorized that seas of liquid methane and ethane might exist on the moon's surface which was later confirmed by the Cassini mission back in 2004 eight hours after its closest approach Voyager 1 snapped this picture of the planets ring system revealing hundreds of magnificent bright and dark ringlets that consist of trillions of small icy particles plus larger scattered boulders Voyager 1 collected colossal amounts of data and discovered three previously unknown moons during its flyby but from this point onwards its primary mission was complete and the spacecraft would never come close to another astronomical object again but at a distance of about four billion miles away Voyager 1 was commanded by NASA at the request of the astronomer Carl Sagan to point it camera back towards the Sun one last time in February 1990 the spacecraft captured a series of images that became known as the solar system family portrait the mosaic consists of 60 frames that once magnified revealed Venus Earth Jupiter Saturn Uranus and Neptune it is the first ever portrait of our solar system as seen from the outside the famous photograph of Earth became known as the pale blue dot and captures our planet as a tiny blue speck in a magnificent beam of scattered light after all of the images were transmitted back to earth engineers turned off the spacecraft's cameras so that it could power other instruments as it continued on its journey into the unknown then on the 16th of December 2004 24 long years after its Saturn encounter Voyager 1 crossed the termination shock a region where solar wind abruptly slows down and heats up as it encounters interstellar wind here the spacecraft would have to travel through a turbulent area known as the heliosheath which is the outer shell of a bubble of charged particles around the solar system Voyager 1 finally became the first human-made object to cross the threshold of interstellar space on the 25th of August 2012 the incredible spacecraft that was only built to last five years is still collecting data thirteen point five billion miles away from the Sun detecting the full intensity of cosmic rays beyond our solar system according to NASA the spacecraft will have enough energy to power its instruments until 2021 then it will pass through interstellar space until it eventually comes within 1.7 light-years of a star in the Ursa Minor constellation around 40,000 years from now I really hope you enjoyed this video and if you did then please hit the like button share and subscribe if you haven't already also for those of you who have recently become a patron of mine I would like to say a massive thank you you really are amazing subscribers if anyone else would like to help support my channel then please scroll down to the description and click on the link that will take you to my patreon page where you can gain extra benefits depending on your donation which could be watching over early content receiving never-seen-before artwork gaining a potential video shoutout plus much much more every single donation helps me improve this channel and i really do appreciate it thank you so much for watching and I'll see you next time [Music]
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Channel: V101 Science
Views: 3,338,879
Rating: 4.9060864 out of 5
Keywords: what did voyager photograph?, how far is voyager?, voyager 1 images, where are the voyager space probes?, outer solar system, real planet photo, deep space images, interstellar space, is voyager outside of the solar system, voyager 2, Earth, moon, jupiter, saturn, titan, heliosheath, termination shock, pale blue dot, NASA, Voyager 1, Documentry, blackhole photo, photo of jupiter, real images, planetary flyby
Id: Du5hekU95mY
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 9min 21sec (561 seconds)
Published: Thu Apr 18 2019
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