Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · Jun 17
Voyager’s Uranium-238 Clock Stays Accurate for 4.51 Billion Years, Outlasting Record’s 1 Billion
Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · Jun 17

Voyager’s Uranium-238 Clock Stays Accurate for 4.51 Billion Years, Outlasting Record’s 1 Billion

1 articles · Updated · spacedaily.com · Jun 17

Summary

  • Scientists said the uranium-238 sample on each Voyager Golden Record can date the spacecraft for several billion years, correcting the common claim that the clock works for only about 1 billion years.
  • 4.51 billion years is the isotope’s half-life, letting any finder compare remaining uranium with decay products to calculate how long the sample has been on the spacecraft.
  • That timing window exceeds the record’s own expected survival in interstellar space—roughly 1 billion years—so the practical limit is the disc wearing away, not the uranium becoming unreadable.
  • A second clock is also etched on the cover: a pulsar map using 14 pulsars whose slowing spin periods provide an independent date check against the uranium reading.
  • The dating system may never be used, since Voyager 1 will come only within a couple of light-years of another star in about 40,000 years and neither craft is aimed at a target.

Insights

With power failing, can a risky 'Big Bang' maneuver save the 50-year-old Voyager mission from silence?
Could Voyager's map to our past become a dangerous beacon leading directly to Earth?