Voyager 1 is the most distant human-made object, and it is now so far away that talking to it is becoming painfully slow.
At the ragged frontier where the Sun’s influence gives way to interstellar space, Voyager 1 has stumbled into something that ...
It takes light a single day to travel 16 billion miles. The Voyager 1 probe will need a little longer, just 49 years.
A faint sound described as a 'ghostly signal’ by global news was detected near Voyager 1. The spacecraft is currently far ...
As it heads out of the solar system never to return, the deep space probe Voyager 1 is headed for yet another cosmic ...
In 2026, Voyager 1, humanity's farthest reaching Energizer Bunny of a probe, will travel toward an almost comprehensible ...
Voyager 1 and 2 traveled billions of miles to reach the heliopause, showing how the Sun's magnetic influence marks the ...
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech Scientists lost contact with the interstellar Voyager 1 probe from Oct.
Engineers at NASA have successfully fired up a set of thrusters Voyager 1 hasn’t used in decades to solve an issue that could keep the 47-year-old spacecraft from communicating with Earth from ...
And half of the 50 years, NASA Voyager 1 has spent billions of miles traveling into interstellar space. In October, it went through a complete communication blackout; now, after weeks of quietness, ...
For nearly five decades, NASA's twin Voyager probes have plumbed the cosmos in search of answers to some of astronomy's most perplexing mysteries about our solar system and its place in the wider ...
This means that it would still take a little over four whole years of traveling at lightspeed to reach the red dwarf—not that ...