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Voyager 1 Has Made An "IMPOSSIBLE" Discovery After 45 Years in Space

Launched just weeks apart in the summer of 1977, Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 were first tasked with exploring Jupiter and Saturn. They accomplished this by providing detailed studies of these gas giants. But the journey didn’t stop there. Voyager 2 went on to conduct the first-ever close-up observations of Uranus in 1986 and Neptune in 1989. These historic flybys of four planets earned the mission the title “Voyager Grand Tour.” Instead of ending, the resilient spacecraft set their sights on a more ambitious goal: exploring deep space.
Now, 46 years later, both Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 are still traveling and collecting crucial scientific data from the distant regions of the cosmos. In 2013, NASA made a groundbreaking announcement: Voyager 1 had officially entered interstellar space—the region between stars, beyond the sun's magnetic fields and particle influence. It's like leaving the busy solar system and stepping into a serene, star-filled wilderness. This journey continued in 2018 when Voyager 2 also crossed into this vast region, located 17.7 billion kilometers from the Sun

Видео Voyager 1 Has Made An "IMPOSSIBLE" Discovery After 45 Years in Space канала Nebryx
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