Active mission

Voyager 1 and 2

Twin probes launched in 1977, now the only spacecraft reporting from interstellar space.

Image: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Voyager 1 and 2 launched weeks apart in 1977 to tour the outer planets, and never stopped. Voyager 2 remains the only spacecraft to have visited Uranus and Neptune. Both have now crossed the heliopause, the boundary where the Sun's influence gives way to interstellar space.

Each carries the Golden Record: sounds and images of Earth curated by Carl Sagan's team, a message in a bottle for any civilization that might find it. Their plutonium power supplies fade a little each year, and engineers keep them alive by switching off instruments one by one.

Voyager 1 is the most distant human-made object, over 15 billion miles out, and both probes are still returning data from a region no other spacecraft has reached. Every reading is the first and possibly last of its kind for decades. When one falls silent, humanity loses its only interstellar outpost.

Key Facts

Launched
1977, sixteen days apart
Voyager 1 distance
Over 15 billion miles, interstellar space
Unique visits
Voyager 2: only spacecraft to Uranus and Neptune
Signal travel time
Almost a full day, one way
Cargo
The Golden Record

Timeline

  1. Summer 1977

    Both probes launch from Cape Canaveral

  2. 1979-1989

    Grand tour: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune

  3. August 2012

    Voyager 1 enters interstellar space

  4. November 2018

    Voyager 2 follows

  5. Next up

    Science operations continue as power allows

Latest Voyager 1 and 2 News

No recent stories for this mission. Browse the timeline above or all news on the homepage.

Facts last reviewed 2026-07-11. Official mission page: science.nasa.gov