Space Topics: Voyager
Voyager's Last View
by Charlene Anderson
August 2002
This article is reprinted from the September/October 2002 issue of The
Planetary Report.
Home. Family. This will be Voyager's enduring legacy: It has changed forever
the feelings raised by those words. Through its robotic eyes we have learned
to see the solar system as our home. Through its portraits of the planets
we know that they are part of our family.
Apollo astronauts showed us a tiny Earth alone in the blackness of space.
Now, with these images, Voyager has shown us that Earth is not really alone.
Around our parent Sun orbit sibling worlds, companions as we travel through
the Galaxy.
The Voyager Family Portrait
Credit: NASA / JPL
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These family portraits of the Sun and planets were Voyager's final photographic
assignment. Planetary Society President and Voyager Imaging Team member Carl
Sagan worked for a decade to get these pictures taken. Between the two Voyager
spacecraft, they returned some 67,000 images of the four outer planets and
their 56 known moons. Voyager 1 had the slightly easier assignment: It encountered
Jupiter in March 1979 and swung by Saturn in November 1980. Then it headed
out in search of the heliopause, the edge of our Sun's sphere of magnetic
influence, and where the solar wind gives way to the wind from the stars.
In August 1989 Voyager 2 flew by Neptune, completing its reconnaissance mission,
having visited Jupiter in 1979, Saturn in 1981 and Uranus in 1986. After passing
Neptune, Voyager 2 joined its twin on the way to interstellar space.
The Voyagers had been launched in 1977 to take advantage of a planetary alignment
that occurs only once every 176 years. The outer planets were lined up so
that a spacecraft could swing from one to another, threading its way past
the 4 gas giants in only 12 years. Mission planners at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory could select their paths from among many possible trajectories
and targets.
For Voyager 1, they chose to send the spacecraft close by Titan's south pole
to obtain close-up data on Saturn's largest moon. Titan's thick nitrogen atmosphere
proved to be heavy with complex, carbon-rich organic molecules, and its surface
is possibly dotted with lakes of liquid hydrocarbons. For carbon-based lifeforms
living in a primarily nitrogen atmosphere - such as ourselves - a world like
Titan is well worth a close look.
But to fly close to Titan, the project team had to sacrifice Voyager 1's
encounters with Uranus and Neptune or a close-up look at Pluto. Its path around
Saturn swung the spacecraft up and out of the ecliptic, the plane defined
by Earth's orbit about the Sun. Looking from its Pasadena home on Earth's
northern hemisphere, the spacecraft now appears to be coasting above our solar
system.
Voyager 1 was chosen to take the family portrait because fewer instruments
might be damaged by looking back toward the Sun. And, to Voyager 2, now beyond
Neptune and traveling much closer to the ecliptic, Jupiter was too close to
the Sun to be picked up by the spacecraft's cameras.
So on February 14 - Valentine's Day 1990 - Voyager 1 aimed its cameras at
a string of small colored dots clustered just to the right of the constellation
Orion - the Hunter. The spacecraft was then 32 degrees above the ecliptic
and nearly 6 billion kilometers (3.7 billion miles) from the Sun. It took
39 wide-angle views and 21 narrow-angle images. The narrow-angle camera, with
a lens resembling a telephoto, took three consecutive images through colored
filters of seven of the nine planets. This enabled image processors at the
Jet Propulsion Laboratory to construct the colored portraits of the planets
seen on pages 16 and 17. The Multi-Mission Image Processing Laboratory then
pasted together the wide-angle images into the mosaic on the next page.
Voyager had produced the first portrait ever of our Sun and planets together.
But like shy family members at a holiday gathering, the smallest planets
avoided having their pictures taken. Mars and Mercury were lost in the glare
of the Sun. The outermost planet, Pluto, was too tiny and far away. So this
family portrait is incomplete. The next generation of spacecraft will be unable
to take another family portrait. Magellan and Galileo, and the planned missions,
such as the Soviets' Mars '94 and NASA's Mars Observer and Comet Rendezvous/Asteroid
Flyby, plus the joint NASA/European Space Agency Cassini mission, will be
locked in orbit about their target planets. None of these will ever gain a
perspective from which they could see the solar system as Voyager did.
Voyager alone could look homeward and capture our family of planets as they
looked on February 15, 1990. Voyager alone could so graphically show us how
Earth and the planets are inextricably linked to our parent Sun.
Home is now a corner of space brightened by a small yellow star. Family is
now a company of planets circling that star together. Our home and family
now encompass an entire solar system.
Thank you, Voyager.
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