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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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During lockdown I've been getting back into a hobby I had as a kid: space.
It's all a bit more interesting than before though as you can now download apps from NASA to view images from their satellites etc. Beats a boring book and a cheap telescope that I used to have. I can't believe though that
Voyager 1 and 2 are still going strong and sending information back from interstellar space (the only man-made objects to do this) some near 43 years from when they were launched. Simply amazing. Is anyone else a bit of a space geek? |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Pretty amazing to think that they’re SO far away, literally outside our solar system, and yet STILL sending data back that can be received and understood. It’s all too much for my comprehension - the people who put them together are beyond intelligent aren’t they? |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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I can't get an iPhone cable to last 3 years so goodness knows the engineering skill that goes into making these things. The Voyager missions are one of humankind's greatest achievements. |
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"I can't get an iPhone cable to last 3 years so goodness knows the engineering skill that goes into making these things. The Voyager missions are one of humankind's greatest achievements."
Well voyager was designed and built to last and USB cables et al are designed to fail after a short while so we keep buying them at inflated prices |
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By (user no longer on site) OP
over a year ago
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"Pretty amazing to think that they’re SO far away, literally outside our solar system, and yet STILL sending data back that can be received and understood. It’s all too much for my comprehension - the people who put them together are beyond intelligent aren’t they? "
Yeah, Voyager 1 is nearly 14 billion miles away from Earth. That's some serious self-isolation. |
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