Timothy Ferris on Voyagers' Never-Ending Journey
With the spacecraft poised to leave our solar system, the writer who helped compile the time capsules they carry reflects on our deepest foray into outer space
- By Timothy Ferris
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
And that’s about it. The Voyagers will wheel around the galaxy, overtaking some stars and being overtaken by others but seldom getting close to any. Like you and me and everything else, the galaxy is mostly space: Fire a shotgun blast from one edge of its disk all the way through to the other, and the odds are not a single pellet will hit a star or planet. Hence the Voyagers are expected to remain adrift in space forever—that is, unless one of them eventually shows up on an alien starship’s radar screen and gets grappled aboard.
Which brings us back to the “Golden Record,” Voyager’s message for the ages. It’s a gold-plated copper disc, 12 inches in diameter, containing sounds of Earth, greetings in 55 languages spoken by 87 percent of the world’s population, 115 analog-encoded photographs and 90 minutes of music ranging from the bell-pure tones of Pygmy girls singing in a forest in Zaire to Beethoven’s Cavatina and Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B. Goode.” To facilitate playback, the aluminum case enclosing each record carries a ceramic phono cartridge plus a diagram showing how to use it. (The correct playback speed, 16 and 2/3 rpm, is diagrammatically defined in terms of the fundamental transition time of the hydrogen atom.) The record’s case also sports a pulsar map, showing Earth’s location at the epoch of launch, and a patch of uranium-238 from whose half-life the time elapsed since launch may be inferred.
The technology, though outdated, has the advantage of longevity. As Iron Age cuneiform inscriptions remind us, grooves cut into a stable medium can last a long time. The Voyager records should remain playable for at least a billion years before succumbing to erosion by micrometeorites and cosmic rays. A billion years is 5 times the age of the Atlantic Ocean, 5,000 times longer than Homo sapiens have existed.
It’s true, as Ed Stone says, that “Voyager is an incredible discovery machine, discovering things that we hadn’t even known we didn’t know.” But each probe is also a tough-as-nails, faster-than-a-speeding-bullet time capsule, carrying gifts proffered with no hope of return. Should extraterrestrials ever intercept it, that fact may speak volumes. It suggests that however primitive and ignorant we were, something in us was expansive enough to consider that we were not the universe’s only scientists, nor its only explorers.
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Comments (6)
Beautifully written and haunting--suggests that every space shot is really a kind of futile arrow against our own solitude and mortality. Loved it.
Posted by Ted Anton on August 17,2012 | 12:24 PM
The phrase in the second to last paragraph, "The technology, though outdated..." prompts me to request an education. I've thought about the Voyager recordings for many years (I have the commercial CD's of them), and have always thought analog was a good choice (even if nearly mandatory at the time). Compared to a digital alternative, that is. Isn't the fact that, e.g., ASCII character 65 being defined as a capital A, an Earth convention that computer-literate cultures have agreed to? If there truly were extraterestials, wouldn't the "primer" necessary to explain how we on Earth define the bits and bytes of our digital audio files be much larger than the relatively simple physics behind the analog production of sound waves on these golden records?
Posted by Dwight Klettke on May 18,2012 | 04:25 PM
Iwsh he would get his technical facts correct and sorted out rather than try to make them more dramatic that they are as opposed to technically impressive and reflecing creatrivity within the project team, both engineers and scientists as well as JPL project support spersonnel.
Posted by Norman F.Ness on May 6,2012 | 05:26 PM
What an absolutely incredible article. The author actually made me feel sad and jealous for these two incredible machines. Oh, but to see what these instruments will encounter. Fare thee well, Voyagers.
Posted by Dan on May 5,2012 | 01:44 PM
I love Timothy Ferris's writing. After listening to his "Seeing the Dark" numerous time, it was his voice I heard while reading this wonderful article.
Posted by Bill on April 24,2012 | 12:44 PM
A brilliant article, I enjoyed it immensely. Lots of good information in it.
Posted by Ron Knight on April 22,2012 | 10:10 PM