Added: 4 years ago
From: nemonequam
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  • The Voyager missions have been EPIC. What a trip.

  • These planets are soooo beautiful.... kinda makes me wish everyone could visit them :(

  • @difficultsyllables I don't think u'd like to visit one of those: "Jupiter is perpetually covered with clouds composed of ammonia crystals and possibly ammonium hydrosulfide. The clouds are located in the tropopause and are arranged into bands of different latitudes, known as tropical regions. These are sub-divided into lighter-hued zones and darker belts. The interactions of these conflicting circulation patterns cause storms and turbulence. Wind speeds of 100 m/s (360 km/h)" from wiki ahah

  • :(

  • You think if I had not already death to our planet would be completely doped Despoiler of beings, a destruidors yes? Sure why not also because in every place there is the nature of man exit threat 'to have been born ham:? Can someone answer us

  • the only way people of earth will come together in peace is if we get invaded by aliens. I bet my life nobody will ask one another "are u a jew?" are u a muslim? ru a hindu? are you white? are you black?..All that will matter is that "we" must fight "them" in order for the "human" race to continue. I sooo hope we get invaded by Aliens so we all come together and make peace with each other instead of killing one another over something stupid as "money"!! Long live good, kind hearted, human beings

  • yes we humans are pony

  • anyone knows what are the king of gasses that the gas giants are made of_ if you do plz tell me

  • How long can voyager send back data?

  • @terryvision42 i heard till 2025

  • Who are the 13 miserable bastards disliked this???

  • Beautifully done, a new combined art form - and scienfically informative.

  • steven hawkings , says we should not be sending a hello to other forms of higher intel , as like little fish in the sea we should remain hidden and not invite , what we would never accept are understand anyway

  • Did it ran out of energy?

  • When did it stop?

  • Why is Saturn the only one with what looks like actual camera footage???

  • And the thought of a pice of workmanship by humas, drifting in space, forever ,whatever it reaches, aliens,planets,w/e.... Is just amazing and sad in a way XD

  • LOL THEYLL still be alive but will sometime break,

    They will be sending as much data as they can :P

  • There will always be communication lol,as long as it lives and Isnt broken...

    But the further they are, the longer it takes to get the messsage/datas.

  • @echizenn808 Its still drifting away by a million miles per day/ Einstein said absolute zero changes matter=wonder what will happen to this woderful machine then? I've alaways had two daydreams about what could have been added to the craft to find out more and what might happen; I always wanted nasa to fix a telescope to it so we could see all things from new distances-closer and better than Hubble even, the other is that voyager will come back as space is curved...Voyager was a fantastic craft

  • listen to "Train drops of jupiter " while watching this it goes surprisingly well

  • BWV 639 is an excellent choice of music for this imagery.

  • Потрясающе!!! Спасибо... I thank you very much!

  • Amazing to think that Jupiter is 1000 times the size of Earth, but it completes a rotation every 10 hours. I can't wrap myhead around it.

  • @0311jonesy Equally amazing and fascinating is that Jupiter's "red spot" is a gigantic storm roughly the size (diameter) of the entire Earth that has been raging for hundreds of years; or again that Jupiter may very well have a "metallic" core (it's unclear exactly what terms we want to use for gaseous matter condensed under such immense pressures) that, is, probably, about the size of the Earth (in volume) but several times its mass.

  • la musica es simplemente maravillosaaaaaaaaa!!

  • JUPITER IS AMAZING!!!!!!!

  • excellent choice of music...

  • @ace23194 I think the Voyager project in theory is probably one of human's greatest creations and accomplishments.

  • @captainjjb84 - It was one of our species' best moments. I hope NASA & JPL can achieve such success again, then someday send a human crew on a ship.

  • nice photos , i hope someone find voyager or voyager 2 in space !

  • what is the name song ?

  • yo creo que la unica manera que haiga vidA En esos platenas es mandando personas o sangre humana para que se produsca la vida si Dios nos creo del polvo y la sangre es lo que no da la vida pues la sangre es la vida y hay que enviarla a los planetas

  • yo mama is so fat she can still be seen from the voyager

  • Voyager has been said to no longer be in communication by 2025.

  • @captainjjb84

    really?

    voyager is still sending in data?

  • @airstation828 Yes, but like I said, in 2025, Voyager will no longer have enough power to transmit any data back to Earth. The only hope is that if any intelligent life encounters the probe, they will hopefully watch the Golden Record to learn about Earth and so on.

  • this is one of the most beautiful videos i have ever seen

    it is sad to see the voyager leave into space....but after we are all gone

    it will still be there, floating in space....it may be lonely, but as long as it is there

    with its little message in the form of that gold record,

    it will serve as eternal proof that mankind ever existed...

    good bye...voyager

  • @airstation828 lol or millions of light years away and it gets hit by radiation or a asteroid =p slight chance but would suck if it never made it to another alien being.. maybe they are seeking out other life too... atleast they might disover us :)

  • Ive had the privilege to see the exact replica of the voyager 1 spacecraft at the JPL, It is located in the Von Karmen meeting room

  • Its so sad in the end... Voyager leaves our solar system... =(

  • Can you imagine born on uranus for exemple and see picture of the earth not ravaged by the humans how it would be nice !

  • Can you imagine born on uranus for exemple and seeing picture of the earth not ravaged by the humans how it would be nice

  • Wow that Jupiter "surface" look so strange and awsome and the same time! I want high resulotion pics about few km above that legendary Planet...

  • What do think wecould be bigger than jupiter and are heads pop?!

  • i think it used plutonium for propulsion

  • @bulitrocket It's power subsystem uses Plutonium 238, which through radioactive decay in radioisotope thermoelectric generators, powers the spacecraft - including its communication system (antenna) to talk to earth. Even to this day!

  • how does the voyager get its enegry frm to keep travlin in space ?

  • @BIGFACE08

    When it passed by Jupiter and Saturn it performed gravitational slingshot maneuvers to escape from the Sun's gravity.

    So I don't thing it needs a huge amount of propulsion fuel now to continue the trip!

  • @nutsbutdum This is effectively right. It's gravitation energy is positive with respect to the sun's gravity well and it will continue on an escape (hyperbolic) trajectory away from the sun.

    This goes back to Newton's first law - objects in motion, stay in motion lest the influences of external forces. In the vacuum of space, far from a gravitational body, these are to 0th order non-existent.

  • @amirsthebest12....grow up!

  • Good video, simple, straight to the point but informative, and pleasant to watch and listen.

  • mira que sodes parvos frikis do karallo fillos de puta!!

    ala, agora a jujel a tradusir isto cabrons

  • So how do we link time and space ?

  • thank you. it is breathtaking

  • It's so amazing how far this satellite has traveled, and to think it isn't even a fraction of the distance from the side of one grain of sand to the other relative to the size of the universe.

  • i would comepare it more liek the distance from on side of an atom to the other

  • it is a fraction, just a very small fraction :]

  • @pkpaulkersey

    A, it's not a satellite. B, grain of sand relative to what?

  • Thx with a little common sense you should still get the point.

  • WOW!!

    How small and puny we humans are!!

  • @abusaleh12 how small we atoms are!!

  • @abusaleh12 ya uranus is big lmfao!

  • What does Star Trek and toilet paper have in common? They both explore your anus for cling ons.

  • miket1m.....LMAO!!!!

  • uranus is a greek word.. it is pronounced uranOs and in greek means "the sky".all planetes are named after the ancient greek astologists, uranus has just never been translated into english

  • uranus is big lol

  • who cares if its pronounced YOUR-ANUS, the planet keeps rotating and keep in mind were puny humans

  • But, it's NOT pronounced your-anus. But Yourinis. He was a Roman God.  Discovered in the 1700's, the word anus wasn't around yet. But, now it's a running joke..

  • J.S. Bach now reminds me of two things: Voyager 2 and Hannibal Lecter :)

    Seriously though, beautiful video, it's really emotional.

  • is pronounced UR-EN-ES  you fuckin idiot

  • Now its pronounced Urenus NoW!!! Fucktard. It was pronounced "uranus" And its better that way.

  • Nope. That's wrong. it's actually supposed to be urinis. That other pronunciation makes no sense.

  • gREAT VIDEO, BUT WHAT A STUPID NAME FOR A PLANET, CMON URANUS!?

  • Majestuoso....para KArla Azucena...

  • Wonderful...

  • look, there's a lot of professionals on here but I'm bothered by the fact you fail to mention how cold it is in these parts, some -450dFahrenheit....also you fail to mention why the Earth has Nitrogen and Oxygen and Mars and Venus have Carbon dioxide...

  • Man, Universe is sooo BIIIG!!!

    God, where/when are you?

    We love you sooo much!!!

  • @robert332201 GOD IS NOT REAL

  • beautiful. this is going on my favorites for sure!

  • I saw the live feeds from the Voyager II probe on NASA TV. Uranus and Neptune were discovered many years ago, but we hadn't seen them up close until Voyager II flew by.  They are so far away that not even the wonderful Hubble Space Telescope can see Uranus and Neptune today like Voyager II did in the late 1980s.

    The two Voyager probes are the best money NASA ever spent on any mission, in my opinion.

  • As a NASA JPL mission designer, it's inspiring to read comments like yours.

    It's important to mention that the Voyagers, namely Voyager 2, had a special opportunity where the planets it encountered happened to all be in the right places that it can visit them after receiving a gravity assist at each. This opportunity is quite literally once in a life time. It was essentially a 4 for 1 (actually more than 4 if you consider all the other ISM & planetary moon science) for Voyager 2.

  • all that is so true but were it not for the great minds at NASA JPL that favorable alignment would have ment nothing and might have been lost for ever. Thank you so much for doing the work you do to bring things like this to us.

    Missions like this really make me apreciate what we have and wear we are more then ever.

  • I agree with sparkplug1018-- thank you for being a part of a magnificent team of thinkers, dreamers and doers. :)

  • @drstrangeluv25 Haha I just found this comment while doing research for my project

  • wow

  • this is absolutely surreal ! like i dream i once had at childhood...ahh,how we forget where we come from.

  • Ich ruf zu dir Herr Jesu Christ by Johann Sebastian Bach [1685-1750]

  • maguinifico...

  • This video and the music reminds me Solaris from Tarkovsky.

  • It's the same piece and the video is space related! Fancy that.

  • amazing video. after reading the description i imagined that the two probes, drifting for hundreds of years. their computer systems gathered immense amounts of data and experienced incredible cosmic phenomena-and (at least 1 of them) eventually becomes self-aware. the probe has feelings and can ask questions. it is amazed at the universe it was sent to observe, and sometimes ponders it's origins, who created it and what is its purpose?

  • Beautiful, well done.

    (BWV 639!)

  • Altissimus deus non adjuvet! ;-)

  • Awesome video. It nearly brought me to tears.

  • Kind of sad in a way, that the Voyager probes gave us so much and they'll be drifting alone in space forever.

  • Voyager 1 & 2 are still working (partial) and will be the first human made devices leaving our solar system. Thats extremly enthralling to me.

    The real sad thing is that they will stop operating in ~15 years because of the dying nuclear batteries.

  • can you imagine being on the satelites being able to experience personally the views!

  • Apart from the fact that the solar system doesnt just end at Pluto. There is a massive void, then a belt similar to the Kuiper belt, then another patch of nothing, then a massive belt of gamma radiation and berylium particles. After that is technically the outer reaches of our solar system. If you were travelling at light speed, it would take another 30,000 years after passing Pluto to get past the solar system. So all in all its a long shot that the probe will get that far.

  • This is wholly incorrect. The Kuiper belt is not particularly large, terminating in about 50 AU. The sun's bowshock, like a supersonic jet's shockwave, is believe to be at about 250 AU. Voyager 2 is now past the Kuiper Belt at about 80 AU traveling at 4 AU/year.

    Moreover, it's worth mentioning our nearest neighbor, the Centauri system, is a little over 3 lightyears away. You may be thinking of the Milky Way galaxy, which is 30,000 kpc in diameter.

  • Nice video, thanks for sharing..☺

  • At 2:42 we see when the famous Pale Blue Dot image was born. And then hearts were opened, thanks to a new view provided by science.

  • It is Chorale Prelude in F Minor by Johann Sebastian Bach.

    And it is a great Classical piece !!!

  • THANX !!!

  • this is great

    thanx

    what the name of the music ??

  • Carl Sagan's legacy! period.

  • men it's cooooooool

  • GREAT VIDEO!!! this really helped me with my project on jupiter :D

  • COOL!!!

  • Great movie !

    Ich zieh mein Hut !

  • voyger is now heading out of the solar system and soon to other system (will be out of our solar system by 2012)

  • So where is the voyager now?

  • Several years ago, Voyager became the first man-made space probe to leave our solar system. Beyond that, I can't tell you exactly where it is.

  • I remember a few months ago NASA said that in the direction it was going, It's almost out of the galaxy by now. Since we are on one of the outer arms of our galaxy

  • No, they're leaving the solar system- technically they've breached the region where our solar winds cancel the incoming solar winds from other stars. So they no longer hane the wind at their backs.

  • the lonely voyager. in the solar sistem.

    great job dude!

  • Asking children if they know that Uranus is a planet has very funny outcomes. "Whats my anus?"

  • Amazing.

    Thx Nemonequam

  • superjob on uploading this video.......

    thanks a billion!!!

  • I just got back from neptune!

  • why does no one explain anything about uranus? I was watching The Journey To The Edge Of The Universe when it premiered on the national geographic channel, and when it got to uranus, all they said was how it might have been toppled over by a stray planet, then went ot neptune, where as they explained shitloads of stuff about the other planets

  • Pictures and Music fit perfectly together. Thank you! (Beautiful Music of Bach, I love it.)

  • 1:33 Mimas looks like the death star

  • video to as ahaaaaaahho mxvzas as urauns uggga

    mlaooooamc

  • fantastic...good job!

  • Thank u. Really

  • beautifull

  • enjoyed this - thanks

  • i went to jpl yesterday and

    they said it travels 1 million miles each day!!

  • thats fasssssttttt

  • daaammmnnn its incredible to think that something that is now 9.4 Billion miles from us is onboard that rocket at the launch...

  • anyone know where i can buy the sheetmusic on its own as a digital download?

  • i love the voyager!

  • thanks to voyager

  • Thank you VOYAGER, good luck in its quest

  • I love the idea of the Voyager spacecrafts flying through space long after the earth (and maybe the sun) has gone, only to be found by some other civalisation, maybe even to show them that they where not alone in the universe. Fantastic!!!

  • In 30000 years maybe some race out there will find Voyager 2 hurtling toward Aldebaran a giant red orange star in Taurus.

  • i dont buy it..these planets hold 1000mph winds enough to rip you apart..where's the beauty in that hunh?..more like metal music would apply here..

  • dance-techno???

  • Classical music matches perfectly with outer space photos and video.... both are elegant and mysterously close to the heart.

    From this vid, we can feel how large is the universe and how small are we.

  • this is a video ppl from all over should watch... truly awesome and inspiring to say the least!!!

  • Ah what a brilliant vid. Fave.

  • awesome they r the best pics ive seen on youtube but how can the voyager travel for that long wat is it using

  • Voyager is powered by decaying Plutonium-238. It has enough power to maintain basic instrumentation and communication until 2020-25.

  • goons

  • The 2 Voyager missions are truly one of the triumphs of the human race. To imagine that they are still functional after over 30 years of service in the harsh space environment is amazing. Great video.

  • Excellent video ! Spectacular images !

  • I wonder if it will find this unknown 'planet x'

  • Nope, cause there isn't one.. it's a modern myth, like bigfoot. Plus, the Voyager's aren't telescopes.

  • Good video. I recall when I was 5 years old I watched it flew by Neptune on the TV.

  • I could watch this video every day for the rest of my life.

  • it's a shame that we might see past the interstellar space because after 2025 voyager 2 can no longer power any single instruments on it

  • Yeah, though at least we are happy now that we can enjoy what we have of them. Their attenuates is what we fear losing, then their fuel, which is nuclear. Not sure what type, I'll have to look it up.

  • Very nice. I recently figured/estimated that traveling at 47,000 M.P.H., the New Horizons to Pluto - if it was sent to our next nearest star Proxima Centauri, would take 62,663 years to arrive. Anyone still think we are being visited by UFO's from out of our solar system, LOL. Regardless of beliefs, one thing is for sure. The Universe is an amazing and unbelievably huge place.

  • 1. Amazing project & video.

    2. Yes, the universe is kinda big but the world was once flat (not so long ago) and it too was big but we found a way to make it small. The universe will unfold itself in time and will too become small.

  • i am leaving for jupiter next week om my man made rocket

    there is a spare seat anyone interested?

  • no maybe someday we will be able to send all racist biggoted morons like you to neptune so you can be cushed by the pressure all while drowning in extreamily cold liquid gas. eventually your body will explode... and thats a fact. get a life. i'm white and i'm fucking sick and tired of racist people. racist people always die as ignorant pathetic morons and not a sole misses them.

  • Great video! So many places to see around a single unimpressive star, in an unimpressive galaxy...

  • One of the best videos on youtube.

  • Nice video

  • Oops!

    at the time 00:16 there is a rocket on the launchpad wich is Atlas-Agena.

    but Voyager Mission performed by Titan III rockets.

  • tew ) sick they are sad sad sad this finger forgot me end to an end new all city, city sited city ended sit and listen.

  • i totally love astronomy its really interestng.one day i will study astronomy and be a great astronomer

  • i love it thanks to the person that made this video its beautiful i love space!!!

  • This video is so beautiful. I love the fact this song is played to SUCH a GORGEOUS Bach song that perfectly portrays the stunning beauty of the planets, the magnificent accomplishment of photographing them, and how lonely the Voyager spacecraft is out there by its lonesome. I think this is one of humankind's greatest accomplishments.

  • did you gguys know that the voyager was slingshoted by the jovian planets gravitational pull? im only 16 and i luv astronomy is just earthbreaking