Las Vegas Review-Journal

Where no ship has gone before

NASA, PBS mark 40th anniversar­y of Voyager launch

- By Marcia Dunn The Associated Press

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Forty years after blasting off, Earth’s most distant ambassador­s — the twin Voyager spacecraft — are carrying sounds and music of our planet ever deeper into the cosmos.

Think of them as messages in bottles meant for anyone — or anything — out there.

This Sunday marks the 40th anniversar­y of NASA’S launch of Voyager 2, now almost 11 billion miles distant. It departed from Cape Canaveral on Aug. 20, 1977, to explore Jupiter and Saturn.

Voyager 1 followed a few weeks later and is ahead of Voyager 2. It’s humanity’s farthest spacecraft at 13 billion miles away and is the world’s only craft to reach interstell­ar space, the vast mostly emptiness between star systems. Voyager 2 is expected to cross that boundary during the next few years.

Each carries a 12-inch, gold-plated copper phonograph record (there were no CDS or MP3S back then) containing messages from Earth: Beethoven’s Fifth, chirping crickets, a baby’s cry, a kiss, wind and rain, a thunderous moon rocket launch, African pygmy songs, Solomon Island panpipes, a Peruvian wedding song and greetings in dozens of languages. There are also more than 100 electronic images on each record showing 20th-century life, traffic jams and all.

NASA is marking the anniversar­y of its back-to-back Voyager launches with tweets, reminiscen­ces and still captivatin­g photos of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune taken by the Voyagers from 1979 through the 1980s.

Public television is also paying tribute with a documentar­y, “The Farthest - Voyager in Space,” airing Wednesday on PBS at 9 p.m. PDT.

The two-hour documentar­y describes the tense and dramatic behind-the-scenes effort that culminated in the wildly successful missions to our solar system’s outer planets and beyond. More than 20 team members are interviewe­d, many of them long retired. There’s original TV footage throughout, including a look back at the late astronomer Carl Sagan of the 1980 PBS series “Cosmos.” It also includes an interview with Sagan’s son, Nick, who at 6 years old provided the English message: “Hello from the children of Planet Earth.”

Planetary scientist Carolyn Porco — who joined Voyager’s imaging team in 1980 — puts the mission up there with man’s first moon landing.

“I consider Voyager to be the Apollo 11 of the planetary exploratio­n program. It has that kind of iconic stature,” Porco, a visiting scholar at the University of California, Berkeley, said.

 ??  ?? The Associated Press file The “Sounds of Earth” record is mounted on the Voyager 2 spacecraft on Aug. 4, 1977, prior to encapsulat­ion in the protective shroud for launch. Sunday marks the 40th anniversar­y of the launch.
The Associated Press file The “Sounds of Earth” record is mounted on the Voyager 2 spacecraft on Aug. 4, 1977, prior to encapsulat­ion in the protective shroud for launch. Sunday marks the 40th anniversar­y of the launch.

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