These space probes have survived much longer than their predicted lifetimes, and some have reached far beyond their original mission. Of course, these spacecraft were originally planned to explore planets in the Solar system, but now they’re trailing beyond our system and are still teaching scientists something new.
Voyager 1 and Voyager 2
Voyager 2 crossed the heliopause in 2012, the boundary where the Sun’s particle flux ceases to be the most significant impact, in 2012, and Voyager 2 surpassed that point in 2018. “Voyager 1 has been in interstellar space for a decade now… and it’s still going, still going strong,” said Linda Spilker, Voyager project scientist and a planetary scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California. used his statements.
The Voyagers have turned off some of their energy-consuming vehicles such as cameras, but they continue to collect data through sensors, and they even made a very important discovery. As you know, the Sun is constantly emitting magnetism and plasma around it. It was estimated that there were fewer particles from these plasmas in the outermost parts of our system. However, after the Voyagers crossed the heliopause, they encountered much denser plasma. Astronomers are still puzzled by this.
Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11
New Horizons
Not only did it complete its primary mission, but it also got a glimpse of the smaller Kuiper Belt object Arrokoth in 2019 as its first mission extension. Instead of leaving New Horizons in deep sleep, NASA assigned it a new mission on October 1. This mission is again about the Kuiper Belt. Meanwhile, New Horizons will hibernate until March 1, 2023, and then wake up.
How far are the spacecraft?
- New Horizons distance from Earth: 8.36 billion kilometers away. It is 7 hours 44 minutes away at the speed of light.
- Pioneer 11 distance from Earth: 16.47 billion kilometers away. It’s 15 hours and 15 minutes away at the speed of light.
- Pioneer 10’s distance from Earth: 19.6 billion kilometers (12.23 billion kilometers in 2003) away. It’s 18 hours 14 minutes away at the speed of light.
- Voyager 2’s distance from Earth: 19.88 billion kilometers away. It’s 18 hours 25 minutes away at the speed of light.
- Voyager 1’s distance from Earth: 23.82 billion kilometers away. It’s 22 hours and 4 minutes away at the speed of light.