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What If We Turned On Voyager 1’s Camera? 

Primal Space
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Voyager 1 has been in space for over 40 years making it the furthest man made object. Despite this, the Voyager 1 cameras were turned off in 1990 leaving Voyager 1 completely blind. But why were they turned off in the first place and what would Voyager see if they were turned back on? In this video I cover just that as we learn more about the Voyager 1 camera system and why Voyager 1 is Permanently blind.
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Short on time? No problem. Feel free to skip ahead in this video using the chapter links below.
00:00 What If We Turned On Voyager 1’s Camera?
01:25 What Kind of Camera is on Voyager 1?
05:02 How Does Voyager 1 Send Data to Earth?
06:06 Why Was The Voyager 1 Camera Turned Off?
07:02 How is Voyager 1 Powered?
07:52 What Would Voyager 1 See Now?
Music used in this video:
» Cold Blue - Aston
» Double You - The Mini Vandals
» Third Eyes - Bobby Renz
» Sunset Trails - DJ Williams
» Court and Page - Silent Partner
Credits:
Written and edited by Ewan Cunningham ( / ewan_cee )
Narrated by: Beau Stucki (beaustucki.com/)
Primal Space is a participant in the in the Amazon Associates Programme, an affiliate advertising programme that allows channels to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.co.uk & Amazon.com.
#nasa #voyager #voyager1

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21 май 2024

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Комментарии : 5 тыс.   
@TNitroH
@TNitroH Год назад
That picture of Earth was taken as a request from Carl Sagan. He convinced NASA that it would be tragic not to take that opportunity. Never again would this opportunity exist. Thank you Dr. Sagan!
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Much appreciated and absolutely worthwhile!
@RageSuit
@RageSuit 5 месяцев назад
thanks for that in-fo-mation :P
@akatmountain3098
@akatmountain3098 4 месяца назад
You're welcome. Yes, I have shuffled off my mortal coil, but can type through a medium I knew in Ithaca.
@tooprivate6775
@tooprivate6775 4 месяца назад
@@akatmountain3098are you dead?
@envitech02
@envitech02 3 месяца назад
Thank you Dr Carl Sagan. Effectively he is the author of the Pale Blue Dot.
@JamesR624
@JamesR624 Год назад
I gotta say. For a "digital camera" of the 1970's, a ~600kb is insanely impressive. And a transfer rate of ~100kb/second is even more impressive from that time and distance.
@duranium4445
@duranium4445 Год назад
The camera is even older. The tech was already 10 years old when it launched.
@imonit4272
@imonit4272 Год назад
I thought that too.
@Nitrogang
@Nitrogang 6 месяцев назад
To compare many decades later we still were using 56k modems for the internet.
@aigmatic
@aigmatic 6 месяцев назад
And thats still faster than my wifi 😂
@lukttk
@lukttk 5 месяцев назад
Tbf its spacecraft technology it gotta be the best it can make
@ArchusKanzaki
@ArchusKanzaki Год назад
Hearing about “Pale Blue Dot” always makes me shiver. To know that something out there took photo from that far away…. It truly represents humanity’s potential, that we may eventually travel that far.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Same. Pretty mind blowing to think about and really provides hope for the future in a lot of ways.
@nuntana2
@nuntana2 Месяц назад
Hopefully, if our crappy politicians focus on peace.
@Nautilus1972
@Nautilus1972 28 дней назад
We did.
@Amacherasu
@Amacherasu 13 дней назад
Why…?
@brentbartels9254
@brentbartels9254 4 дня назад
We will never send Humans that far
@davidp7414
@davidp7414 Год назад
This video answered MANY questions I have had for years. I have always wondered about the resolution and transmission rate of this era's spacecraft. My favorite memories were the very late Apollo missions (moon buggy) and early shuttle eras.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
So glad that you found this video helpful! And thank you for your comment as well!
@ncard00
@ncard00 5 месяцев назад
This is why we need to be able to travel at light speed, so we can send out new and updated space objects frequenctly, that can travel far, without having to wait forever to get results and get the objects into the right places in space. Voyager it still over 70.000 years away from the closest other star to us, but a lightspeed space telescope could reach it in a litttle over 4 years. This is why we need to, well, first solve climate change here on earth. But then, we need to invest all the money in space technology, so we can unlock light speed travel as soon as possible.
@xNSHD
@xNSHD 2 месяца назад
@@ncard00 pretty sure traveling as fast as the speed of light is impossible. no material object that has mass can travel at the speed of light atleast not with our current understanding of physics, which means for it to be possible a scientific breakthrough that basically debunks everything we think we know about how the universe and physics work would need to happen for it to be even a possiblity.
@richardsimonik7355
@richardsimonik7355 Год назад
My favourite space moment was the moonlanding. It may seem like a lazy choice, but when you watch the 50-year old videos it still gives me a goosebumps,that people actually walked (and played golf) on a different cosmic body. Seems so fascinating and sad that last mission was completed before 50years
@Hypersonic_Industries-ESI
@Hypersonic_Industries-ESI Год назад
Same profile pic lol
@tranquil0335
@tranquil0335 Год назад
@@Hypersonic_Industries-ESI I use that same pfp for everything but RU-vid. Haha
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Agreed! Not a lazy choice at all. I feel the same.
@arstotzka333
@arstotzka333 Год назад
I bet someones gonna say "BuT IT WaS FaKE" or some shit
@GodzillaJawz
@GodzillaJawz Год назад
@@arstotzka333DISCLAIMER THIS IS A JOKE!!!!!:but it is fake how did the sun not appear on the night time side of day when a pair is the radius of Pluto times 5 if the moon landing was real?
@Deepak-ul9om
@Deepak-ul9om Год назад
Getting the final transmission from the Opportunity rover that read, *"My battery is low and it's getting dark,"* was one of my favorite space moment. Despite being designed to function for only 90 days, the rover continued working for a full 15 years until a massive dust storm finally led to death for the solar-powered rover.🥺🥺
@berigg5940
@berigg5940 Год назад
Ikr, it’s incredible and that last transmission is just sad
@wallyman292
@wallyman292 Год назад
@@berigg5940 Better than it singing "ON a bicycle built for two"
@brianbauer7560
@brianbauer7560 Год назад
Damn. That's really sad. Did it really say "and it's getting dark"?. I know it's just a machine but that's really 😢😭... Great comment.
@Deepak-ul9om
@Deepak-ul9om Год назад
@Banter Maestro2 oh really! Didn't know that. Thanks for sharing.
@RandomizerLab
@RandomizerLab Год назад
You know that didn't happen right? It never said that. Its a fucking computer.
@fxdelusions77
@fxdelusions77 Год назад
I had to do a class project on the Voyager 1 and 2 satellites. At the time, I had an uncle who worked at JPL, and he gave me the opportunity to speak with engineers who worked in communications, and on various satellite programs. Even though I was only in 4th grade at the time, just being able to walk the JPL campus, and interview the amazing women and men who worked in various capacities, at JPL, I’ve always looked back at this as a life experience. Nowadays we have the internet and technology to assist with research. Back then, all I had was a journal, number 2 pencil, college ruled paper, people to interview, and books to use. Truly a fond memory that your video has brought back to mind for me. Thank you very much 🙏
@markm2778
@markm2778 Месяц назад
Just wow
@ctmdrivetest789
@ctmdrivetest789 Месяц назад
now you became what ? still just listen and look?
@exxonsnail
@exxonsnail 26 дней назад
@@ctmdrivetest789 what kind of question is this???
@spqr888
@spqr888 24 дня назад
Can I ask what year you did this class project? Were both or either Voyagers still in our solar system?
@johnfinnegan9647
@johnfinnegan9647 16 дней назад
im so jealous! thats awesome
@bboomermike2126
@bboomermike2126 Год назад
It is hard to believe it has been that long. I was part of the deep space tracking team, DSS14 Goldstone tracking station. It took many many weeks to get ready for Voyager 2 and 1 launch. All the other missions we didn't start tracking until the spacecraft was in deep space. For reasons still unknown to me, we where to start tracking on the first pass. We had to make many modifications to our tracking system because the signals were too strong. Even pointing the 64 meter dish antenna was a challenge.
@raithryn6427
@raithryn6427 Год назад
@Darkfarfetch nothing exists and no story has the probablility of ever happening huh?
@msgfrmdaactionman3000
@msgfrmdaactionman3000 Год назад
I was in grammar school following it in the newspapers. Awesome project to have been a part of!
@bboomermike2126
@bboomermike2126 Год назад
@@msgfrmdaactionman3000 Yes, but with the internet you can follow it just as well I did.
@muresanandrei7565
@muresanandrei7565 Год назад
@jordanwardle11
@jordanwardle11 Год назад
funny to think that now having issues getting the signal, that you would have the signal be too strong to start with
@PointyTailofSatan
@PointyTailofSatan Год назад
Voyager was NOT filled with tech that was "way ahead of its time". In fact, by the time of launch, its tech was almost 10 years old. The planning, production and testing of Voyager was so intricate and complex, it was impossible to update its components once the planning was complete and production began.
@misticnumberone
@misticnumberone Год назад
are you gay
@WafflesInTheRain
@WafflesInTheRain Год назад
And I think it’s safe to say, they nailed it.
@QualityPen
@QualityPen Год назад
This is almost always the case for any government project, including “cutting edge” military tech. Historically, complex hardware like tanks and jets have taken 10-30 years to go from concept to mass production. Even if a recently introduced system is more advanced than anything else out there, it’s actually been in development for years and relies on individual components which are likewise years old. By the time one generation of military hardware is finally deployed, the next generation has already been in development for a while.
@TheRealtimeG4M3RS
@TheRealtimeG4M3RS Год назад
Much like James Webb, if we started designing a successor now, 20 years from now at launch many of the components would be outdated comparatively.
@underthetrees4780
@underthetrees4780 Год назад
No technology that exists is ahead of it's time.
@radcanadian7365
@radcanadian7365 Год назад
It's sad that we won't ever be able to see images from Voyager 1 again, but it's nice knowing it's out there somewhere, for possibly millions of years after we're gone. Kind of like a memorial of Humanity's achievements edit: I understand that there's a possibility of the Voyager 1 getting hit, but I'm talking about the possibility that it doesn't get hit.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Agreed. Something very cool thinking about it outliving all of us.
@sendthis9480
@sendthis9480 Год назад
“The Future Of Football, 17776” Is a fun story, told from the perspective of three satellites 15,000 years after they stopped being useful. They just float around space and watch humanity and football. Lol
@radcanadian7365
@radcanadian7365 Год назад
@@sendthis9480 I'll check that out lol, sounds neat 👍👍
@radcanadian7365
@radcanadian7365 Год назад
@@primalspace For sure! It's very neat, maybe if other life does exist they'll find it at some point
@mkb7001
@mkb7001 Год назад
I think it's still broadcasting science data, just not pictures
@opiumextract2934
@opiumextract2934 Год назад
The most defining space moment for me was the space shuttle challenger explosion because as a 6 year old boy who had never experienced a death, it made me realize just how precious life is. Sitting around my classmates watching it happen and everyones jaw dropped and not knowing how to react. Our teachers played a pivotal role in how we handle death. I may get some flak for that, but that's the moment that stands out.
@dennisturman1726
@dennisturman1726 5 месяцев назад
I agree. I watched it from my 8th grade English class window. It was life changing.
@ltbarkley
@ltbarkley 5 месяцев назад
I was about the same age, and watched it live in the sky above my head when that happened. I still remember the adults around me gasping and being silent, before crowding around our car to hear the radio for what happened.
@MS-ii1sv
@MS-ii1sv 3 месяца назад
I just remember the jokes about it.
@gimlithepiggy5366
@gimlithepiggy5366 9 месяцев назад
My favorite is voyager, but a very specific aspect of it. The golden record carried on it. All kinds of languages, music, important things to us. It just shows how we as a species are so inclined to reach out and connect with others.
@primalspace
@primalspace 9 месяцев назад
A great answer! I have always held a special place for the golden record for the same reason. Definitely a favorite of mine too. Thanks for sharing!
@rustler160
@rustler160 2 месяца назад
Especially when we want to put our best foot forward!
@MrVikingsandra
@MrVikingsandra Год назад
Wow, hearing about the voyagers always gives me the chills...the distances they're traveling!
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Same! Pretty mind blowing!
@taragnor
@taragnor Год назад
The thing that's really crazy is that despite the massive distance it has travelled, 24 billion km is nothing on a cosmic scale. What sounds like this massive distance to us is a grain of sand on the cosmic scale. It's less than how far light would travel in a day.
@loczek25853
@loczek25853 Год назад
@@taragnor And in cosmic scale even lightspeed is nothing :D
@dustinplatt6882
@dustinplatt6882 Год назад
Voyager has traveled such a small amount of distance. It was launched in 1995 and has traveled 23~ billion kilometers. The crazy fact is that it will take it 17,669~ years to reach a light year. The Milky Way is 100,000 light years across Our Local Group is 100,000,000 light years across The observable universe is 94,000,000,000 light years across. Space is f u c k I n g unfathomable as how we conceive distance. I don't think Voyager has even made it to the Oort Cloud yet.
@realdeathpony
@realdeathpony Год назад
@@dustinplatt6882 launched in 95 and camera turned off in 90. Ok
@exoticarcher6625
@exoticarcher6625 Год назад
My favorite space moment was the hammer and feather test on the moon. I am currently in college studying physics and when I first saw that video I was blown away. The fact that when two masses fall without air resistance and land at the same time is unbelievable.
@davidcurtis7236
@davidcurtis7236 Год назад
I mean... Terminal velocity is the same for everything.
@connergalles7106
@connergalles7106 Год назад
Didnt know that
@assetaden6662
@assetaden6662 Год назад
@@davidcurtis7236 you really had to write that, didn't you? A person was sharing something happy, yet your pretentious ass just wanted to ruin that. Yeah, everyone knows that terminal velocity is the same. But hearing "three objects of different mass fall at the same time" isn't the same as seeing that happen.
@Brixster
@Brixster Год назад
@@davidcurtis7236 What does terminal velocity have to do with this? They dropped them like 2 feet on a planetary body with little atmosphere. There is literally no air resistance to stop their acceleration even if they were to be in freefall for miles.
@FlorenceSlugcat
@FlorenceSlugcat Год назад
@@davidcurtis7236 nope. Terminal velocity is not the same for every object. Terminal velocity is limited by air resistance. The terminal velocity is the maximum velocity an object can accelerate to for its given resistance. A good way to think of it is a parachute. A parachute will never reach reach the same speed as a rock if falling in atmosphere. Its resistance is sufficient to slow down the user upon deploying. Terminal velocity is technically the velocity at which the sum of drag and buoyancy equals the force of gravity. The faster an object goes, the more drag it has. The more surface area perpendicular to the the gravitational force an object has, the more drag it has. The more dense an object has, the less buoyancy it has. Thoses 3 variables are not the same for two different objects, so the terminal velocity is not the same
@LionheartedDan
@LionheartedDan Год назад
The sheer vastness of space is humbling.
@gaynzz6841
@gaynzz6841 23 дня назад
wait until you look through a microscope
@TheMalogBal
@TheMalogBal Год назад
I don't know why but it makes me cry Thinking about the beauty of the universe, our existence in it, and our perseverance to put something out there that says "we were here" Even if no one ever sees it, I still think it's really beautiful
@eastcoastmostwanted710
@eastcoastmostwanted710 Год назад
I like your thinking
@SachinPatel-dl4rs
@SachinPatel-dl4rs Год назад
I feel you :)
@Chafflives
@Chafflives 9 месяцев назад
A bit like ‘space graffiti.’ 😬 If only everyone appreciated how vast and awe-inspiring this universe is. Finite too. All relative. We may be living in an instant within another entity. Enjoy it while it lasts. 👍
@matthews2804
@matthews2804 Год назад
My favorite space moment was the launch of JWST last year. It was the most exiting and nerve racking launch I have ever seen, and the pictures it’s taking now are amazing!
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
💯💯
@palerider2143
@palerider2143 Год назад
Exiting….?
@claytonmarchetti724
@claytonmarchetti724 Год назад
There are quite a few space moments that come to mind, like the first shuttle mission that was really fantastic. I’d have to say I just loved watching the real time video when a Father and son sent a lego shuttle to space. The sent it up on a weather ballon with a mini figure glued to the wing. It was so awesome, and you felt you were there.
@mxly358i2
@mxly358i2 Год назад
My favorite space moment is preserving the images from the James Webb Telescope such as the "pillars of development" image. These images inspire me to delve further into the subject of astronomy.
@stile8686
@stile8686 Год назад
My favourite is from the Voyager probes flyby of Jupiter. In particular you can hear interviews from the scientists involved that they looked at the moons mostly as an afterthought, expecting them to look much like our own moon. The amazing differences between the four Galilean moons of Io, Europa, Ganymede and Calisto revolutionised our view of the smaller elements of the Solar System. Whole new worlds in themselves. That amazing moment when someone discovered that Io had active volcanoes. Utterly amazing.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Oh I love this one! It really just goes to show how much is "hiding" out there if we make the effort to discover it!
@pyropulseIXXI
@pyropulseIXXI Год назад
"We have a sample size of one Earth moon. Therefore, us very smart scientists declare that we expect Jupiter's moons to look the same as Earth moon, and they are just an afterthought; again, we are super smart scientists."
@stile8686
@stile8686 Год назад
@@pyropulseIXXI That's the great thing about scientists. They love being proved wrong. It just means the universe is even more wonderful than they thought.
@MagicToadSlime
@MagicToadSlime Год назад
@@pyropulseIXXI easy to say in hindsight
@MrPerson61
@MrPerson61 Год назад
I think it'd be cool to do a hypothetical video on what if we had a probe with modern equipment out where Voyager 1 is right now. Would it have a higher data transfer rate? How much better quality and resolution would the pictures be? Could we see anything now that we couldn't before? Would it have more battery life to be able to keep all its systems on for longer?
@airr01
@airr01 Год назад
Wow that really would be an interesting video
@kafiravadh3934
@kafiravadh3934 Год назад
@primalspace We want a video on this pls.
@TheBcoolGuy
@TheBcoolGuy Год назад
I still think it'd be best to wait until we have profitable nuclear fusion before we create another Voyager-type probe, or it won't be that much better, speaking from a pragmatic standpoint.
@thecma3
@thecma3 Год назад
I would also love to see the video, but just to throw out some thoughts on these hypotheticals... If we built another Voyager in a similar way to how we build deep space probes now, the data rate wouldn't be astronomically higher. Physics is the main limitation at the end of the day; a larger dish, more powerful amplifier, and different frequency would definitely make a marked improvement, but it wouldn't be on the orders of magnitude that other technology has improved. Power would be difficult; we'd probably use really similar nuclear power sources (RTGs) to Voyager, so, again, not a significant improvement. The instrumentation may be much improved. Camera sensors, like you suggested, are probably the biggest leap since voyager, but leaps and bounds have been made across both in-situ and remote sensing. I imagine a modern-day Voyager may also include instruments that are fundamentally different than we used in the 70's like active radar.
@batbat224
@batbat224 6 месяцев назад
If the new voyager was using the new DSOC (deep space optical communications) then yeah it would have faster data rate I think.
@reactions4u438
@reactions4u438 Год назад
a huge coincidence that I check this out on the 33rd anniversary of this picture. Such an incredible perspective comes from seeing this picture
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Perfect timing!
@buckyV
@buckyV Год назад
I think my favorite space moment was watching the two side boosters from Falcon Heavy land themselves. Probably because that’s the biggest space achievement I’ve actually gotten to watch in real time. Keep up the great work on these videos, I love them! :)
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
💯💯 there's really something to seeing the moment happen in real time. You can feel the excitement and energy without even being there.
@jannikheidemann3805
@jannikheidemann3805 Год назад
The only thing that went to space is those boosters kinetic energy, which they provided to the part of the rocket that goes into space.
@KarpucMotoring
@KarpucMotoring Год назад
@@jannikheidemann3805 what? the point?
@rohanlorange3660
@rohanlorange3660 Год назад
Agreed
@barbarianpirate
@barbarianpirate Год назад
Probably my favourite space moment is the first image of a black hole. We already knew how it would roughly look like, but it is still absolutely mind-blowing to confirm it looks like that. I just don't really have much words about it, is something absolutely amazing
@LannasMissingLink
@LannasMissingLink Год назад
I think what's so cool about it is thinking about the first images of, say, Pluto where its super grainy but exciting. And in a couple decades (or maybe sooner with James Webb?) We'll get to have a better look at it. That's what I find so exciting! Thinking about what's still there to discover
@HamBurgerHam.
@HamBurgerHam. Год назад
Imagine if it was rainbow colour
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Agreed! An amazing moment!
@zaiz6018
@zaiz6018 5 месяцев назад
The most amazing thing about these things is that after launch, that’s the technology it has and we’ll just have to work with it. Like some of them run on systems only a handful of people today actually know, cause those systems have been replaced long ago. They really put a lot of work into keeping them going as long as possible
@Js16108
@Js16108 11 дней назад
I was born 10 years and 2 days late for this. But for some reason, I’ve been asked “ how were you posing for this” several times and am just finding out I wasn’t born yet
@colinhaggarty4618
@colinhaggarty4618 Год назад
I have to say my favourite space moment has been the first successful landing of a Starship prototype. It seems to represent not only a massive (and necessary) step forward in rocket technology but a shift in philosophy regarding how aerospace engineering is done. I can’t wait to see what the future holds!
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Yes. I have a real appreciation for moments in history that get the world excited for the future!
@ploploppol
@ploploppol Год назад
As a younger space enthusiast my favourite moment was seeing the Cassini mission's recap video. It felt surreal to see all the achievements it had across it's lifetime and gave a unexplainable sense of how small we were.
@TysonEmmy
@TysonEmmy Год назад
Talking about Nat Geo Cassini Farewell video?
@ploploppol
@ploploppol Год назад
@@TysonEmmy yes!
@davekendall9749
@davekendall9749 Год назад
As a very small boy seeing the silent running film near saturn thought to be an impossible distance back then, made cassini close to my hart ,amazing humans achieved that.
@friedfish80
@friedfish80 Год назад
My favorite space moment was as a kid sitting at the dinner table hearing about Voyager. It would be on the news as images would come back to earth. My dad would tell me what it was like working in the clean rooms as he was part of the team building the communications platform on the spacecraft. Voyager 1 and 2 hold a very special place in my heart. My dads handy work is traveling threw interstellar space.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Oh wow! What amazing memories and an even more amazing connection to Voyager. Thank you so much for sharing.
@friedfish80
@friedfish80 Год назад
@@primalspace I been wanting to get a tattoo of the golden record as well. But I don't think the intricate design of the record will translate well as a tattoo.
@Rmanaseri
@Rmanaseri Год назад
I think watching Bruce McCandless making the first untethered space walk is my favorite space moment. The images of him float all by himself, alone in space, are striking. I also have to admire the guts it took to try something like that. Truly showing he had the right stuff
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
So true! Definitely a braver man than I haha.
@RT-qd8yl
@RT-qd8yl Год назад
I'd do that right now without hesitation. If it went wrong then at least I wouldn't have to pay rent or buy food next month.
@jamescheddar4896
@jamescheddar4896 Год назад
jesus can't find you if you die in space
@llywelynddraig853
@llywelynddraig853 Год назад
Not that i blame him but i couldnt think of a job where profesionalisum and safety are more important. Not the mention the millions it costs to get them up there. It kinda shows he doesnt have the right stuff.
@AnonURnot
@AnonURnot Год назад
@@RT-qd8yl you mean for the next two days if you didn’t slam into something
@infernohr
@infernohr Год назад
From my experience, my favorite space moment is when we recieved the first image of a black hole back in 2019. That day, I watched the reveal live on my phone hidden in a pencil case during a school class. Also, the launch of JWST deserves a mention as it is the most advanced and expensive space project yet and I didn't want it to fail in any way. I was very happy when I heard it was fully deployed and my jaw dropped when the first images were published.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Great moments and memories! Thank you for sharing.
@mohnjarx7801
@mohnjarx7801 Год назад
It's not an actual photo though...
@arijeanz
@arijeanz Год назад
@@mohnjarx7801 it's still a historical international collaborative effort and it proves that our imagined renderings of what black holes look like was correct, so I'll still take the black hole picture as a win :)
@scottburns2600
@scottburns2600 Год назад
My favorite space moment was when Barf was jamming out to BonJovi in the winnebago
@FalandoOQueQuiser
@FalandoOQueQuiser Год назад
Poor soul
@user-ks6fl9eu2m
@user-ks6fl9eu2m 28 дней назад
Space a vast frontier and this probe still has a long way to go, who knows what might be found out there!!!!! This is some fascinating stuff, what a great education!!!!!
@brianbauer7560
@brianbauer7560 5 месяцев назад
Goodbye Voyager 1. I love you and I already miss you. Great job friend.
@primalspace
@primalspace 5 месяцев назад
💙💙💙
@alicesmith2636
@alicesmith2636 Год назад
One of my favorite space moments was when the New Horizons images came back. I remember sitting on my bed, watching as the images slowly loaded in of this planet so far away. It was a surreal moment, and one of my favorite memories.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
This is a great one! Definitely a memorable moment for sure!
@AssociatedDairies
@AssociatedDairies Год назад
Personally I absolutely love the JWST launch as it’s the biggest leap into space observation we’ve had in a while and the pictures it takes is absolutely amazing. Can’t wait for the next one! 😊
@RisingFlag100
@RisingFlag100 Год назад
We should get it to take a picture of voyager 1
@AssociatedDairies
@AssociatedDairies Год назад
@@RisingFlag100 omg yes
@riccards
@riccards Год назад
@@RisingFlag100 doubt that its even possible to see it with JWSR
@RisingFlag100
@RisingFlag100 Год назад
@@riccards yeah I know
@Wheresmy240
@Wheresmy240 Год назад
@@riccards agreed. There's no way it could see either of the voyagers at the distance they are from jwst. They're too small and too far. Also, there may not be a "next one" in our lifetime. It looks like we're all about to go nuclear on each other and end society as we know it.
@King.Mark.
@King.Mark. 10 дней назад
if in 100 years we learn to travel at half the speed of light ,we could catch up and over take it in just 10 days after we set off ,125 years later
@Yoopsen213
@Yoopsen213 Год назад
Okay. I have to say. That was an S tier implementation of a NordVPN ad ☠️☠️
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Haha glad you enjoyed that one!
@SlashersGaming
@SlashersGaming Год назад
There are so many space moments throughout history that have been amazing, it is hard to choose a favourite. I would say one of my favourites is the design, launch and usability of the Hubble telescope. It has allowed us to discover beyond our understanding and the science that it has performed is outstanding.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Yes! 💯💯 This is a great one!
@thespacepeacock
@thespacepeacock Год назад
There are so many great moments to choose from, but if i have to choose one it would be Starship SN8’s flight. I had been following the Starship program for the very beginning, back when Starbase was just some tents and Starhopper, and had been looking forward to the first flight attempt for months. I can clearly remember the adrenaline and overwhelming amazement i felt when SN8 finally lifted off. I don’t think i’ve ever felt so excited in my life. I was literally cheering and shouting in on as it hit each milestone. I completely lost it when it relit its engines for the landing burn and flipped vertical again. When it ‘touched down’ (lol), i just sat there completely stunned. Even got a bit emotional. For me, that was the moment it really dawned on me that we are on the brink of a new age in space exploration. I walked away from my pc that day, brimming with excitement for the future, and more inspired than ever.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Love this! So many memorable moments but it really is those times that get us excited for what's to come that stick out I think.
@srf2112
@srf2112 Год назад
The fact that Voyager could be 23 billion kilometers from earth but the star constellations would still appear exactly the same gives you a sense of the unimaginable scale of interstellar space and the universe.
@St8Genesis
@St8Genesis 8 месяцев назад
False, they aren’t exactly the same at all.
@ZygonesBzygones
@ZygonesBzygones 5 месяцев назад
most bright constellation stars are within about 30 ly, so a displacement of that order is sufficient to see the constellations change. 30 ly is huge but far less than 1000s ly as he says
@ZygonesBzygones
@ZygonesBzygones 5 месяцев назад
the parallax shifts voyager sees right now are tiny @@St8Genesis
@n8dawg640
@n8dawg640 Год назад
My favorite space moment in my living history has to be the first flight of falcon heavy and seeing both boosters land at the same time. The energy, the hope, the exhilaration, the joy, all the emotions of that landing still give me chills and choke me up sometimes
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Love that. Nothing like a moment that gives you a reaction like that one. Very memorable indeed!
@milesbowen9433
@milesbowen9433 Год назад
My favorite space moment was Gagarin’s orbit of earth. He explored what every man from the dawn of time had seen, was sent as the first of many to leave the earths atmosphere, into the great unknown. He saw the earth from orbit like no one has ever seen it before. Truly a hero of our time.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Agreed! A very cool moment.
@Tykdhep
@Tykdhep Год назад
who asked
@Jaskab0b
@Jaskab0b Год назад
@@Tykdhep Primal Space asked.
@Tykdhep
@Tykdhep Год назад
@@Jaskab0b did i ask?
@Jaskab0b
@Jaskab0b Год назад
@@Tykdhep You actually did. :)
@TheDwightMamba
@TheDwightMamba Год назад
50 years to travel 1 light-day. Incredible.
@RicardoMartinez-oh9sq
@RicardoMartinez-oh9sq Месяц назад
Mind-blowing.
@MrBismarck1940
@MrBismarck1940 4 месяца назад
I like how NASA is taking care of its satellites and giving Voyager 1 NordVPN so it can watch terrestrial TV shows while its internet access is blocked by aliens.
@primalspace
@primalspace 4 месяца назад
🤣🤣👏👏
@christianhawkins2428
@christianhawkins2428 Год назад
My favorite space moment was watching Starhopper make its first untethered hop, as that was when I really felt the new space race had begun, and every starship flight (and now Artemis 1) since then has been an absolute treat and joy
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
A truly great moment. I personally love any moment that gives me that feeling of advancing forward and excitement around what's coming next!
@ThisHandleIzntAvailable
@ThisHandleIzntAvailable Год назад
My Favorite space moment is hard to choose but I am still perpetually wowed by the fact that we launched a space telescope, realized after it was already in space that it had an issue, and then WENT INTO Space just to fix it. An amazing display of what was possible.
@spaceflight1019
@spaceflight1019 Год назад
Field service at its finest! Anything, anytime, anywhere. That's our mantra.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
💯 agreed!
@aerosolizedaids7476
@aerosolizedaids7476 Год назад
I love how this guy talks, so clear and precise. I'm a native English speaker too...
@ZygonesBzygones
@ZygonesBzygones 5 месяцев назад
it's ai, no?
@gaynzz6841
@gaynzz6841 23 дня назад
lol
@MikesBakes
@MikesBakes Год назад
My favourite space moment was when earth said “it’s earthing time” and earthed all over
@Cotton9403
@Cotton9403 Год назад
My favorite space moment was all of the excitement around the release of JWST's first images. HST did incredible things but getting to see that leap in capabilities after such a complicated deployment for JWST was incredible.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
💯💯💯
@cripejl0
@cripejl0 Год назад
Agreed! My grandfather was one of the many engineers that helped assemble the HST. If he was still with us, he'd be so excited about the JWST. It's so cool to see the new generations of space technology. I'm excited for what's to come.
@colinessary9555
@colinessary9555 Год назад
My favorite space moment was the capturing of the first photo of a black hole. It may not seem like much but I thought it was cool to finally be able to see something that was previously labeled as a concept and could not be seen.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Agreed! Definitely a really special space moment and a favorite of mine also.
@1mariomaniac
@1mariomaniac Год назад
I haven't been around to see very many space achievements. So I have to say my favorite space-related moment has probably got to be the launch of Artemis 1. I wanted so desperately to be able to go to Cape Canaveral to see it in person, but even just seeing it on the TV screen was breathtaking. I was and still am so excited about this successor to the famous Apollo program, and I'm so excited to watch the launch of Artemis 2 in November of next year!
@phillipclark6854
@phillipclark6854 Год назад
I was alive for the space probe to pluto. Just an announcement over my elementary school at the time, but loved the images we got 15 years later 😁
@1mariomaniac
@1mariomaniac Год назад
@@phillipclark6854 I was very little when it launched, but I loved seeing the pictures New Horizons sent back!
@phillipclark6854
@phillipclark6854 Год назад
@@1mariomaniac Very vague memories of the send off myself
@calabrais
@calabrais 26 дней назад
Imagine Voyager faithfully traveling for millions of years to finally approach another planet with intelligent life. What a magnificent gift these being would be presented with. But as Voyager enters their atmosphere, it starts to burn up. A little alien boy looks up to his sky, and makes a wish upon the shooting star he sees. Wishing he is not alone in the universe. Maybe we are those aliens, and the next shooting star you see was sent from someone just like you, long long ago.
@OliverTheSpaceNerd
@OliverTheSpaceNerd Год назад
My favourite space moment was probably the SpaceX Crew 1 launch. It was so inspiring to think that humans were orbiting the earth. It got me back into space again and I have been invested in it ever since!
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Love this! Nothing like a historical moment to reignite that flame 🔥
@daemongamingtv
@daemongamingtv Год назад
My favorite space moment? Probably the identification of 'Oumuamua as the first interstellar object to be detected. I always like to think about how the universe around us affects us here on Earth, and for us to observe it actively happening, even in a minor way, is incredible. How far it must have traveled, how much it must have witnessed.
@zachhoy
@zachhoy Год назад
not identified, still theorized, but cool nonetheless
@beliallordoflies7121
@beliallordoflies7121 Год назад
It couldn't have witnessed much
@wanderinwolf3804
@wanderinwolf3804 Год назад
@@beliallordoflies7121 we don't know where Oumuamua came from, thus we have no idea how long it's been on it's interstellar journey. But either way, it got a wonderful view.
@beliallordoflies7121
@beliallordoflies7121 Год назад
@@wanderinwolf3804 99% of space is empty
@wanderinwolf3804
@wanderinwolf3804 Год назад
@@beliallordoflies7121 who is saying it's close views? you can still, well maybe still, see the other celestial bodies in the distance. Out in the vastness of interstellar space you will most likely be able to view the other stars still, possibly even see close, relatively, by nebulae. Once you are outside the blinding rays of a nearby star that is.
@onlythewise1
@onlythewise1 Год назад
sending voyager 1 out to space was so smart
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
💯💯💯
@kjugirl
@kjugirl Год назад
This was for sure the best introduction to nord vpn EVER. And they are all over RU-vid. Well done
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Haha thanks! Glad you enjoyed that one!
@Inkwell905
@Inkwell905 Год назад
Can we all respect the amount of effort this legend puts into his videos.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
🙏🙏 thank you so much. I really appreciate the comment and love creating these videos for you! What an amazing community we have here!
@canadianoofy5292
@canadianoofy5292 Год назад
@@PartyhatRS wtfh
@Scout025
@Scout025 Год назад
My favorite space moment is when the first images were captured by the James Webb telescope. Compared to the Hubble telescope, the images are so much more detailed and vibrant, it really takes your breath away.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
They really do! Another great moment. Thank you for sharing.
@wolfshanze5980
@wolfshanze5980 Год назад
Well Hubble was always drunk.
@lellopesce
@lellopesce Год назад
I also would say the first landing and walk on the moon would be my favorite moment. Alas, I was in the middle of the Mediterranean sea on a cargo ship, and the TV was broken. Of course we listened on the radio, and were very proud of what was going on. I remember the captain made a cheer for both the landing and the first walk. But my moment was later on, when I walked outside. It was a beautiful night, with stars everywhere, and the moon very bright high up, and while looking at it, thinking "There are people walking over there. How cool is that. Way cool." and also I remember grinning while thinking so. I felt my spirit elevated to another level at that moment. That is a memory that is present in my mind like it happened yesterday.
@A_corofcb
@A_corofcb Год назад
Crazy to think after it's all said and done, voyager 1 might be the only thing left to show our existence
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Pretty mind blowing to think about.
@cbboswell7910
@cbboswell7910 Год назад
My favorite space moment isn't necessarily some big thing that happened, but I remember watching a stream of the shuttle as it was getting closer to the ISS back in the late 2000s. Then my dad takes me outside to look at the shuttle and iss rise and set in our sky. It was amazing and you could even see them get visibly closer in that time frame. We then of course finished the stream after going back inside.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
That's so cool! Such a great moment and amazing memory. Thank you for sharing!
@dalelerette206
@dalelerette206 Год назад
@@primalspace Might have even felt like something angelic.
@Stet709
@Stet709 Год назад
Favorite space moment: I remember when I first heard that the Cassini probe had finally landed on Titan after following it for a while. Saturn is my favourite planet so hearing that a probe was being sent to its largest moon (the only moon with an atmosphere in our Solar system) was intriguing.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Very cool. Another great moment in space. Thank you for sharing.
@hiramlewis3873
@hiramlewis3873 5 месяцев назад
Think of the advancement of Technology since 1977. Just think if we knew then what we know now, how much advanced the Voyagers would be
@thelaw11
@thelaw11 18 дней назад
I’d like to make a scenario in my head , where the Voyager 1 turns on the camera one last time , before losing connection with the earth , to look back at its home for the very very last time and take a picture . We would never receive the picture and it will be found by a civilisation far beyond the stars and somehow they’ll transmit the photo to us , and we’ll wonder “how did this photo get to us?
@Anon24052
@Anon24052 Год назад
Personally my favourite space moment from my lifetime was New Horizons’ photos of Pluto for so many reasons, but mostly it was so special to finally see such a distant world after years of mystery.
@radovanholcik6010
@radovanholcik6010 Год назад
My favourite moment has to be the launch of Crew Demo 2. I was always interested in space, watched space shuttle documentaries instead of cartoons as a kid. But never really watched anything live. That moment changed the whole thing for me forever. I can still remember the excitement I felt when I saw the engines ignite and realised that it was happening at that very moment, not many years ago.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Yes! I love this so much. Something about seeing these moments live just makes them all that much more exciting and so memorable! Thank you for sharing.
@simonlouw7361
@simonlouw7361 Год назад
Probably my favourite space moment was when SLS was rolled out of the VAB for the first time. I know it hasn’t actually launched yet, but to me this rocket represents our future as a multi-planetary species, and seeing it outside for the first time really made so hopeful and excited for the future of human space exploration.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
💯💯 love this one!
@janvanbunningen6468
@janvanbunningen6468 Год назад
Yeah, the SLS uses old space shuttle technology and can only be used once.. no really the future of human space exploration
@Max_Marz
@Max_Marz 5 месяцев назад
"voyager would have to travel thousands of light years just to capture a slightly different perspective than the one we already have" That fucked me up fam.
@salvatorederosa6937
@salvatorederosa6937 Год назад
Favorite space moment: on ISS cosmonaut was unscrewing a bolt on an air vent and the nut crashed to the floor resoundingly. Second favourite Astronaut Cristoforetti explaining how to bathe on ISS with towels and she is hit on the head from a water drop above her. Third the glass of water on the table in ISS.
@blammarus7166
@blammarus7166 Год назад
I can't lie, the Pale blue dot picture is my favorite moment over all. I'm 18 and new to this game to the point that watching old videos of some simple staff being done years ago gives me chills. Love thinking what can we achieve using technology we got today. So hyped about the Artemis mission too, missed none of the tries of getting it launched.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Agreed! Looking back at so many moments in space history and thinking of the technology we have now gets me so hyped for what's coming next and all the possibilities!
@TZG41
@TZG41 Год назад
My favourite space moment was probably the landing attempts of the first spacex starships, not because it was the biggest archivement ever, but more because of the community and the anticipation of it, all the failed experiments and explosions while looking at them in different streams,while hanging around. I really enjoyed the different streams and times and the hype around it and then the success of SN15.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Love that. Something about the community aspect of it all definitely makes a difference!
@ranchodaily1685
@ranchodaily1685 6 месяцев назад
My favorite space moment was probably when the president called the Apollo 11 astronauts on the lunar surface. There's something amazing about that speech and specifically this line, "For one priceless moment, in the whole history of man, all the people on this Earth are truly one" Even though war and violence was prominent before and after that, the idea that the entirety of humanity can come together to achieve one great thing, is so inspiring to me.
@supaflask1275
@supaflask1275 Год назад
I love his honesty that we won't be around to know anything about what ever happens to voyager 1
@codywlsmith
@codywlsmith Год назад
Crew Demo-2 was really the time that got me back into space heavy. I have always loved space and space exploration. But when Doug and Bob went up after a decade of the Space Shuttle being retired, it really ignited that passion in me and I think we have seen such a boom in the space industry because of it.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Love to hear that! It's such a great feeling when something happens to ignite that interest all over again!
@bwadley75655
@bwadley75655 Год назад
What an awesome video I love the way you went into technical detail about how the camera operated. A lot of other videos skip over this sort of detail yet trying to find it out online is difficult as it is too technical for me to understand! So thank you 😊
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Thank you so much! I'm so glad that enjoyed the video and those details that interest me so much as well 💙
@humanrightsadvocate
@humanrightsadvocate 12 дней назад
In the future, people will take selfies with these space probes.
@lazzybug007
@lazzybug007 9 месяцев назад
Everything about voyager is so fascinating..wish we have sent more of these into deep space 🚀
@joes9954
@joes9954 Год назад
My favorite moment was seeing a night shuttle launch during the time I lived in Florida. Seeing a launch alone was amazing, but seeing the night sky nearly seem like day was incredible.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Very cool! Thank you for sharing this moment!
@boonooboonoo1783
@boonooboonoo1783 Год назад
My favorite space moment was definitely seeing the Hubble Deep Field image for the first time. It still fascinates me that this image is taken 20 years ago when pointed at an empty pitch black region of the space that is the same size as the dot on the letter “i” on a book extended at an arm length. Whenever I look at it again, it never fails to impress me. I even have it on my lock screen so it constantly reminds me how insignificant everything is 😂 (in a good way because it motivates me to keep going when things are rough). Although I do like the JWST version as it is more detailed, I like the Hubble more because I believe it really helped to pave the way to as well as revolutionize modern astronomy.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Love this! A great moment, a great memory and a great reminder to keep on going! Thank you for sharing.
@galaxybolt1748
@galaxybolt1748 Год назад
Yeah that makes sense that i motivates you, it’d insignifigant what someone might have done because well look at this deep field imagine. Atleast that’s how i’d look at it.
@super_colddog25
@super_colddog25 4 месяца назад
That photo was taken exactly 19 years before I was born
@kimberlyhovis5864
@kimberlyhovis5864 Месяц назад
I was 6.
@Christin5554
@Christin5554 Год назад
I remember when they launched those space crafts. I almost forgot about this one. Very interesting to see our earth as such a small dot.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Agreed. Pretty amazing perspective as well.
@ChrisDaFlack
@ChrisDaFlack Год назад
My favorite space moment would definitely be Carl Sagan's speech on the Pale Blue Dot photo. It's just so humbling.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Another great moment for sure.
@tesla3442
@tesla3442 Год назад
my favourite space moment is definitely a few of first images provided by JWST. I remember waiting for them like a maniac and comparing them with hubbles photos. It was amazing to finally see these higher quality photos after so many delays of webbs launch.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
A great moment for sure!
@pranjalvw2193
@pranjalvw2193 Год назад
Sending data from 1970 spacecraft using NordVPN Thata Amazing.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Hahaha I mean ... is there anything NordVPN can't do? 😂😂
@dutchvanderlinde5004
@dutchvanderlinde5004 Год назад
I’m in favor of turning the thing around and sending it back here and eventually picking it up and bringing it back down to earth and putting it in a space museum for future generations.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Me too! I would love to see it return home one day.
@ZygonesBzygones
@ZygonesBzygones 5 месяцев назад
not possible
@lucas_evans2207
@lucas_evans2207 Год назад
the first shot looks so retro and also loved the blue marble shot
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
🤣🤣 it really does.
@Wytchandwyvern
@Wytchandwyvern Год назад
My favourite space moment thus far was watching the Artemis 1 mission launch live. The wonderful thing about modern technology is how accessible it makes these things.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Agreed. I feel like so many moments have been made that much greater through the ability to watch them live with the rest of the world (or even just your family.) Something about that energy - so cool.
@JustAnotherGuyRep
@JustAnotherGuyRep Год назад
This is the most explained video on RU-vid about this 2 space probes, and in 10min or less, bravo Sir bravo
@CKILBY-zu7fq
@CKILBY-zu7fq Год назад
My favorite space moment is actually the very day that NASA stopped giving the information out to the public, that's because of what took place, which is why it is my favorite space moment. When you watch the very last video transmitted to the public before they stop doing this, you will see the space shuttle out in space, and it has an arm reaching out into space, and it has men outside of the Space Shuttle, and in the background you see the Earth 45,000 miles away, then you see something come up over the Earth and come toward the direction of the Space Shuttle as it's circled the Earth, and here's the best part, the space shuttle was being filmed by something else that was not the space shuttle, and whatever it was that was filming the space shuttle fired two rounds at whatever it was coming up over the Earth and in a split-second to hot flashes of light shot towards the object coming over the horizon of the Earth, where it saw these things coming and turned around and took off out into space and then disappeared, the story is that they don't know what this thing was but that it went from the earth out into space and disappeared at around 45,000 miles per hour, and they disappeared after 45000 miles of travel, but nobody ever explained what shot those to charge glass pallets at whatever it was coming up over the horizon of the earth that was 45,000 miles away, this is the story given to us by the researchers after exploring this video and discovering what they think that they saw and providing that information to the general public, however I know something even more than that about this incident and that the important factor of this incident is that, the space shuttle was up there yes, but the space shuttle was not alone, and this is the part that most people have no understanding about, what is it I'm talking about?? Always the space shuttle has Chaser Jets, always military aircraft of all types use and have Chaser Jets, yet nobody takes into account that the space shuttle has a chaser space shuttle, which is called the Aurora project, it is unmanned and it has 24 Armament Types on board and it flies around the Earth 7 days a week and lands at Groom Lake once a week after passing over Los Angeles, at over mach 7. I haven't seen this video for years, but I believe it to be the most honest and transparent proof of the United States and NASAs activities ever accidently shown. And its the reason that you do not see honor or integrity in any thing government influenced. I personally observed with 5 others the chaser space shuttle through 6 telescopes. But nobody has a clue that this is a great space moment because it defines weather or not you will ever see the truth again. And, if that's not a great space moment, then the five Russian space shuttles that took off from the earth on their own power and flew around the earth at 35000 miles an hour and landed on their own power prove that we have no need for Rockets oh, yes I know exactly what I'm talking about, the Russians had these space shuttles looked exactly like ours in America, yet they were way smaller like 30 ft long, and two man and they flew up out of the Earth's atmosphere out into space on their own power, this just says every bit of space activities today are a ginormous waste of Mankind's energy and money and every bit of that money they are taking from you with Liberties that they don't deserve, because I never gave them Liberty to do this in my behalf. And then lie to my face like cheeky little bastards,. One of these have to be the best space moment ever in fact they're both the best space moment ever. Okay peace beyond your house.
@thomaswade3072
@thomaswade3072 Год назад
My favorite space moment of all time (so far) was when the ISS became 'international' with the couplings of the American and Russian modules. Second, the successful alignment of the JWST. I think my next will be when Lunar Gateway comes online or when telescopes find proof of habitable exoplanets.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
🙌🙌 love this! So many amazing moment so far, but lots more to come I'm sure! It's only just the beginning 🚀
@addlo2375
@addlo2375 Год назад
voyger 1: before i take this photo this video is sponsored BY NORDVPN
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
A very important message haha.
@addlo2375
@addlo2375 Год назад
@@primalspace facts or VOYGER 1 WILL GET HACKED BY HACKER so thats why nordvpn come in to play
@ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid
@ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid Год назад
5:30 Voyager sent pictures back to Earth using early 1970s tech faster than I could download a single song from Napster using late 90s tech. 🤣
@shauryasaxena485
@shauryasaxena485 9 месяцев назад
Imagine some aliens trying to reverse engineer voyager1 but the nord VPN stopped it
@primalspace
@primalspace 9 месяцев назад
😂😂😂
@astroinfinland6680
@astroinfinland6680 9 месяцев назад
"This mission was sponsored by Nord VPN"
@falconheavy08
@falconheavy08 Год назад
Great Video. Thank you for your awesome work!
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
And thank you for watching. So glad you enjoyed!
@EricKlopp
@EricKlopp Год назад
My favorite space moment was the launch of STS-1. I remember sitting as a 5-year-old boy in my grandparents' living room, staring at the TV and waiting to watch this event. This has shaped my interests up to now. For a long time, space travel for me was the Space Shuttle until I read about the other space programs. But every launch brings back vivid childhood memories.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Love this! A great moment made even more memorable having shared it with family. Thank you for sharing.
@Lerxstification
@Lerxstification Год назад
My fav space moment was when after several attacks, the Romulans, almost beaten, plant a nuclear weapon amidst jettisoned debris. When Spock detects a "metal-cased object", Kirk orders a point-blank phaser shot that detonates the device. The Enterprise is shaken by the blast and many of the phaser crew are incapacitated, requiring Stiles to fill in. Kirk orders operations to work at minimal power to exaggerate the apparent damage and lure the Romulans in for a kill shot. Although the Romulan commander suspects Kirk's trap, Decius, a politically well-connected member of the command crew, pressures him to attack. When the Romulan ship decloaks to launch a torpedo, Kirk tries to spring his trap, but a coolant leak in the phaser control room incapacitates Stiles and Tomlinson. Spock, whom Stiles had called "Vulcan" and insulted as being unneeded in the control room, returns to rescue Stiles and fires the phasers, mortally wounding the Romulan ship. That was awesome!
@marcchapuis9399
@marcchapuis9399 Год назад
I was a 10 year old boy sitting in my grandparents living room and it was my birthday. That and other events have always made me interested in our universe.
@Generalkidd
@Generalkidd Год назад
I imagine the New Horizons probe could probably fulfill this purpose and continue to take pictures in interstellar space. That probe still has a lot of life left and is a lot more advanced than Voyager as well
@TheGreatBloxxer
@TheGreatBloxxer Год назад
Damn you're here to?
@CovenantFieldMarshal
@CovenantFieldMarshal 10 месяцев назад
was not expecting to see you here, def a surprise
@CentralSweeper
@CentralSweeper Год назад
My biggest question would have been “can we receive the data?”
@OceanDragon
@OceanDragon Год назад
My favourite space moment is either seeing the first photos Percy took on Mars or the sounds from Mars. Although the other rovers have taken images, Perseverance has much higher res images combined with hearing what it sounds like on Mars is so surreal
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Very surreal. A truly great moment. Thank you for sharing.
@colacoleslaw
@colacoleslaw Год назад
My favourite space moment is the replacement fender that the astronauts had to fashion for their LRV on Apollo 17, made of lunar charts duck-taped together. I think it's a fun example of the kind of problems that arise and might have be to solved in the moment. Something you might not consider as being particularly important, such as a fender, has a much more pronounced purpose out in the harsh environment of space, but it also highlighted the whole methodology of problem-solving and creative thinking that was prevalent in the Apollo era.
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
So true. Some absolutely amazing and mind blowing problem solving goes on behind the scenes and I'm always in awe of things like that (no matter how "small")
@Brew_n_Biscuits
@Brew_n_Biscuits Год назад
One day, humans may have the ability to use a spacecraft that could catch up with the voyager in minutes!
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
I would love to see that!
@Jumpingjackflash123
@Jumpingjackflash123 Год назад
If we eventually travel faster than light we can out into the universe and see the light from earth millions of years ago or even billions. That light is still traveling and then we can find out how we got here.
@amirnobar2003
@amirnobar2003 6 месяцев назад
That's too unlikely, because no one can travel faster than the speed of light and even getting close to that speed with the laws of physics, IDK if you can still be alive! So what I think about it, is that you can't reach to Voyager 1 in minutes or even hours from earth
@ZygonesBzygones
@ZygonesBzygones 5 месяцев назад
no, that would be faster than c
@10p6
@10p6 2 месяца назад
The interesting part is an RTG is not a battery, and radioactive decay is based on time and not on energy used.
@lflazos
@lflazos Год назад
My favorite space moment was the day New Horizons did it's Pluto fly-by and the pictures were shown to the public. I think it's my favorite for various reasons: one is that I remember the probe being launched when I was a kid, and barely understanding why it would take so long to complete the mission; it gave me a sense of the vastness of the universe and about time (for a 9 year-old, imagining what another 9 years into the future would be like was picturing a very sci-fi thing, but also wondering what my own life would be). Another reason is because the pictures of Pluto themselves were just stunningly beautiful and it was amazing to finally have an image of the dwarf planet. When I studied planets in school, each one had already a picture that was at least a few decades old, but there were none of Pluto. I think the time between 2006-2015 (while New Horizons crossed our whole solar system) was an ark in my life: going from a kid passionate about space who dreamt about becoming an astronaut and didn't agree with Pluto not being a planet anymore to an adult that found his maturity in other more down-to-earth topics and occasionally reading about space (I studied Political Science, and when I was asked why by one professor I said: if I had been born in a better, more just society, I would have liked to be an astronaut but right now I feel I need to help solve things here first). Finally seeing Pluto was very touching (even some joy tears came out and I wrote a whole post about it, I had to share it with all my family and friends!); it brought back to me the sense of wonder about space, human knowledge and the accomplishments we can achieve when working hard, collaborating and giving the best we have as a whole. We are only for a fraction of time in this world, both individually and as species, the best thing we can do with that is try to get a grasp of it, marvel ourselves with the amazing universe that surround us and create out own incredible things in the process. The New Horizons probe reminded me of that as I hadn't in a while, but now your videos are another opportunity to not forget it. Thank you ✨
@primalspace
@primalspace Год назад
Thank you so much for the kind words and for sharing your favorite moment and memories. Means a lot 💙🙏
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