Verge Science | We decoded NASA’s messages to aliens by hand @VergeScience | Uploaded October 2018 | Updated October 2024, 12 minutes ago.
In 1977, twin golden records were sent into space on the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft. Still sailing through space at nearly 60,000 km per hour, the records contain sound, songs, and images from earth. But how did NASA include images on an analog record? Here, we decoded the audio, and see the images the way that aliens were intended to see them.
Video by: Cory Zapatka, William Poor, Sophie Erickson
Graphics: Alex Parkin
Audio: Andrew Marino
Executive Producers: Nilay Patel, Eleanor Donovan
Director of Audience Development: Ruben Salvadori
Social Media Manager: Dilpreet Kainth
General Manager: Stephen Belser
Network Development: Sarah Bishop Woods
Thanks to: Alessandra Potenza, Ron Barry
Special thanks to Ron Barry for walking us through his own audio decoding process, which got us excited in the story over a year ago. You can read about his own adventure and watch his process produce results in real-time in his own video in the links below:
boingboing.net/2017/09/05/how-to-decode-the-images-on-th.html
youtube.com/watch?v=ibByF9XPAPg&feature=youtu.be
Link to Manuel’s code on GitHub:
github.com/aizquier/voyagerimb
Link to the full audio data:
soundcloud.com/user-482195982/voyager-golden-record-encoded-images
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In 1977, twin golden records were sent into space on the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft. Still sailing through space at nearly 60,000 km per hour, the records contain sound, songs, and images from earth. But how did NASA include images on an analog record? Here, we decoded the audio, and see the images the way that aliens were intended to see them.
Video by: Cory Zapatka, William Poor, Sophie Erickson
Graphics: Alex Parkin
Audio: Andrew Marino
Executive Producers: Nilay Patel, Eleanor Donovan
Director of Audience Development: Ruben Salvadori
Social Media Manager: Dilpreet Kainth
General Manager: Stephen Belser
Network Development: Sarah Bishop Woods
Thanks to: Alessandra Potenza, Ron Barry
Special thanks to Ron Barry for walking us through his own audio decoding process, which got us excited in the story over a year ago. You can read about his own adventure and watch his process produce results in real-time in his own video in the links below:
boingboing.net/2017/09/05/how-to-decode-the-images-on-th.html
youtube.com/watch?v=ibByF9XPAPg&feature=youtu.be
Link to Manuel’s code on GitHub:
github.com/aizquier/voyagerimb
Link to the full audio data:
soundcloud.com/user-482195982/voyager-golden-record-encoded-images
The Verge’s sponsors play an important role in funding our journalism, but do not influence editorial content. For more information about our ethics policy, visit theverge.com/ethics-statement.
Subscribe: bit.ly/2FqJZMl
Like Verge Science on Facebook: bit.ly/2hoSukO
Follow on Twitter: bit.ly/2Kr29B9
Follow on Instagram: goo.gl/7ZeLvX
Read More: theverge.com
Community guidelines: bit.ly/2D0hlAv
Subscribe to Verge on YouTube for explainers, product reviews, technology news, and more: goo.gl/G5RXGs