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[–] Cat-hax 1 point 2 points (+3|-1) ago 

Then when the brown masses depletes the world's resources and they start ww3, after the Earth is a lifeless ball of ash all that will be left is us will drift threw space for an eternity.

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[–] bigoak9 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

In space 37 years and works perfectly , my dodge trucks air quite working 2 years after purchase

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[–] Cat-hax 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago 

You're first mistake was buying a Dodge.

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[–] MannKepetry 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

it even says dodge to warn you.

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[–] bigoak9 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago 

I know , everybody has same excuse great Cummins motor shitty truck but hard to enjoy motor if rest of truck falls to pieces

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[–] Gargilius 0 points 6 points (+6|-0) ago 

Think about this: the engineers who sent the command to fire the thrusters might be the children of the engineers who designed the spaceship... I don't know about you guys, but it makes me feel all warm and fuzzy inside.

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[–] prairie ago  (edited ago)

Images on the golden record

By switching to the spacecraft's "trajectory correction maneuver" thrusters, last used during the spacecraft's encounter with Saturn in 1980, engineers say they will be able to extend the lifetime of Voyager by two or three more years before its waning power reserves expire.

Sad.

[–] [deleted] 0 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago 

[Deleted]

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[–] eatmorealmonds 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

Nope, no science here other than a layperson. I wonder of these things also Wildebeest, yet it's pretty damn empty out there on the whole plus the universe seems to love our adventures, doesn't it (for the time being at least, until that Gamma ray makes its beeline for us)

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[–] Master_Foo 0 points 4 points (+4|-0) ago  (edited ago)

It's because of Jupiter's gravitational pull that makes it so safe to pass near it. The planet has essentially been vacuuming it's area for billions of years cleaning the debris. Anything that doesn't fall down the gravity well is tidied up by consolidating all particles into it's rings or it's Lagrange points.

So, yeah, you are correct in your assumption. There should be more debris around Jupiter. There IS more debris around Jupiter. But, Jupiter was nice enough to put everything away neatly in his closet.

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[–] Aged 3 points 1 point (+4|-3) ago  (edited ago)

The chance of Voyager meeting any kind of debris near a planet randomly would be of one in thousands, and we can use telescopes to see these things from here and make it avoid it. Outside in the galaxy? Voyager has better chances at winning in at lottery. Hell, it has a better chance of intelligent life actually finding it, realize it isn't a natural object but made by someone, and try to retrieve it. Space is very big.

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[–] theoldguy 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

we can use telescopes to see these things from here and make it avoid it

Something the size of a marble traveling at 100k mph would pretty much destroy Voyager and we wouldn't have any chance of seeing something so small and so far away.

[–] [deleted] 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago 

[Deleted]

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[–] Master_Foo 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago 

You aren't wrong. I'm not correcting you. I'll just add that conservation of momentum will consolidate anything that doesn't fall into the gravity well into rings, like Saturn, and to a lesser extent Jupiter. So, there is quite a lot of material floating around, but, it's been packed into a stable orbit in a single plane, which makes the area of danger quite small.

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[–] carlip 0 points 16 points (+16|-0) ago 

"the Aerojet Rocketdyne manufactured thrusters fired perfectly."

Aerojet Rocketdyne is a corporation that was founded in 2013 after the merger of Aerojet and Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne. The real credit should go solely to the Aerojet engineers and fabricators, fuck Pratt and Whitney.

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[–] newoldwave 0 points 12 points (+12|-0) ago 

Watch out when Vger returns..

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[–] 1Sorry_SOB 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago 

Brush off that dust. I think it says Voyager.

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[–] newoldwave 1 point -1 points (+0|-1) ago 

sorry you didn't get it

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