Conjugation verb voyager in French
Model : manger
Auxiliary : avoir
Other forms: se voyager / ne pas voyager / ne pas se voyager
Verbs ending in -ger keep the "e" after "g" if they it is followed by vowels "a" or "o": il mangeait, nous mangeons.
- il/elle voyage
- nous voyageons
- vous voyagez
- ils/elles voyagent
- je voyageais
- tu voyageais
- il/elle voyageait
- nous voyagions
- vous voyagiez
- ils/elles voyageaient
- je voyagerai
- tu voyageras
- il/elle voyagera
- nous voyagerons
- vous voyagerez
- ils/elles voyageront
Passé simple
- je voyageai
- tu voyageas
- il/elle voyagea
- nous voyageâmes
- vous voyageâtes
- ils/elles voyagèrent
Passé composé
- j' ai voyagé
- tu as voyagé
- il/elle a voyagé
- nous avons voyagé
- vous avez voyagé
- ils/elles ont voyagé
Plus-que-parfait
- j' avais voyagé
- tu avais voyagé
- il/elle avait voyagé
- nous avions voyagé
- vous aviez voyagé
- ils/elles avaient voyagé
Passé antérieur
- j' eus voyagé
- tu eus voyagé
- il/elle eut voyagé
- nous eûmes voyagé
- vous eûtes voyagé
- ils/elles eurent voyagé
Futur antérieur
- j' aurai voyagé
- tu auras voyagé
- il/elle aura voyagé
- nous aurons voyagé
- vous aurez voyagé
- ils/elles auront voyagé
- que je voyage
- que tu voyages
- qu' il/elle voyage
- que nous voyagions
- que vous voyagiez
- qu' ils/elles voyagent
- que je voyageasse
- que tu voyageasses
- qu' il/elle voyageât
- que nous voyageassions
- que vous voyageassiez
- qu' ils/elles voyageassent
- que j' eusse voyagé
- que tu eusses voyagé
- qu' il/elle eût voyagé
- que nous eussions voyagé
- que vous eussiez voyagé
- qu' ils/elles eussent voyagé
- que j' aie voyagé
- que tu aies voyagé
- qu' il/elle ait voyagé
- que nous ayons voyagé
- que vous ayez voyagé
- qu' ils/elles aient voyagé
Conditionnel
- je voyagerais
- tu voyagerais
- il/elle voyagerait
- nous voyagerions
- vous voyageriez
- ils/elles voyageraient
Passé première forme
- j' aurais voyagé
- tu aurais voyagé
- il/elle aurait voyagé
- nous aurions voyagé
- vous auriez voyagé
- ils/elles auraient voyagé
Passé deuxième forme
- j' eusse voyagé
- tu eusses voyagé
- il/elle eût voyagé
- nous eussions voyagé
- vous eussiez voyagé
- ils/elles eussent voyagé
- ayant voyagé
- masc.sg.: voyagé
- masc.pl.: voyagés
- fém.sg.: voyagée
- fém.pl.: voyagées
- ayons voyagé
- ayez voyagé
- avoir voyagé
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Conjugate the French Verb "Voyager"
- Pronunciation & Conversation
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In French, the verb voyager means "to travel." This is easy to remember if you associate traveling with a voyage. When you want to say things such as "I traveled" or "we are traveling" in French, the verb needs to be conjugated . A short lesson will introduce you to the most basic conjugations of voyager .
The Basic Conjugations of Voyager
Some French verb conjugations are easier than others and voyager falls in the middle. It follows the rules of all verbs that end in - ger and is classified as a spelling change verb .
As you study these conjugations, you'll notice that the e after the g is retained in many places where it would be dropped in others, such as the regular - er verbs . This is because the e is vital to retaining the soft g sound when the infinitive ending begins with an a or o . Without that e , the g would sound like it does in the word gold and that is not a proper pronunciation.
Other than that small change in some of the forms, you'll find that conjugating voyager is rather standard. Begin by committing the basic present, future, and imperfect past tenses to memory as these will be the most useful forms you'll need.
Using the chart, pair the subject pronoun with the appropriate tense for your subject. For instance, "I am traveling" is je voyage and "we will travel" is nous voyagerons .
The Present Participle of Voyager
Once again, the e remains attached to the verb stem when forming voyager 's present participle . The ending - ant is added to create the word voyageant.
Voyager in the Compound Past Tense
You also have the option of using the French compound past tense, known as the passé composé . It can be easier than memorizing all those imperfect forms, though you will need the auxiliary verb avoir and the past participle voyagé .
For this construction, you only need to conjugate avoir in the present tense to fit the subject pronoun. The past participle remains the same no matter the subject and implies that the action happened in the past. For example, "I traveled" is j'ai voyagé and "we traveled" is nous avons voyagé .
More Simple Conjugations of Voyager
While the conjugations above should be every French student's first priority, there are a few more simple conjugations you might need as well. For example, when you want to imply that the action of traveling is uncertain, use the subjunctive . If, however, someone's travels are dependent on something else, you'll use the conditional .
There may also be times when you encounter the passé simple or the imperfect subjunctive . These are most often found in more formal French but are good to know.
Should you find yourself wanting to use voyager in direct commands or short requests, the imperative is useful. This is also easier because there's no need to include the subject pronoun: simplify tu voyage to voyage .
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Conjugaison du verbe voyager
Participe passé voyager, sans accord, avec accord, passé composé, plus-que-parfait, passé simple, passé antérieur, futur simple, futur antérieur, conditionnel, synonyme du verbe voyager, traduction voyager.
'voyager' conjugation table in French
Past participle, present perfect, conditional, past historic, future perfect, past anterior, conditional perfect, subjunctive.
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Conjugation French verb voyager
Translation voyager, indicatif (indicative), présent (present), passé composé (present perfect), imparfait (imperfect), plus-que-parfait (pluperfect), passé simple (simple past), passé antérieur (past perfect), futur simple (future), futur antérieur (past future), conditionnel (conditional), passé (perfect), subjonctif (subjunctive), passé (past), impératif (imperative), infinitif (infinitive), participe (participle), gérondif (gerund), synonyms for the verb voyager.
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- Voyager Conjugation
Voyager to travel
Voyager - indicative, voyager - perfect, voyager - subjunctive, voyager - conditional, voyager - imperative (commands).
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Verb Table for voyager
Indicatif • subjonctif • conditionnel • impératif • formes impersonnelles, passé simple, futur simple, passé composé, plus-que-parfait, passé antérieur, futur antérieur, participe présent, participe passé, browse the conjugations (verb tables), look up "voyager" in other languages, links to further information.
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Conjugation of the French verb voyager
voyager – to travel
French verb conjugation tables.
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French verb "voyager"
Translation.
- travel (ride)
- travelling (traveling, journey)
- auxiliary avoir
- first group
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Conjugation
- je voyage /vwa.jaʒ/
- tu voyages /vwa.jaʒ/
- il;elle;on voyage /vwa.jaʒ/
- nous voyageons /vwa.ja.ʒɔ̃/
- vous voyagez /vwa.ja.ʒe/
- ils;elles voyagent /vwa.jaʒ/
- je voyageais /vwa.ja.ʒɛ/
- tu voyageais /vwa.ja.ʒɛ/
- il;elle;on voyageait /vwa.ja.ʒɛ/
- nous voyagions /vwa.ja.ʒjɔ̃/
- vous voyagiez /vwa.ja.ʒje/
- ils;elles voyageaient /vwa.ja.ʒɛ/
Futur simple
- je voyagerai /vwa.jaʒ.ʁe/
- tu voyageras /vwa.jaʒ.ʁa/
- il;elle;on voyagera /vwa.jaʒ.ʁa/
- nous voyagerons /vwa.jaʒ.ʁɔ̃/
- vous voyagerez /vwa.jaʒ.ʁe/
- ils;elles voyageront /vwa.jaʒ.ʁɔ̃/
Passé simple
- je voyageai /vwa.ja.ʒe/
- tu voyageas /vwa.ja.ʒa/
- il;elle;on voyagea /vwa.ja.ʒa/
- nous voyageâmes /vwa.ja.ʒam/
- vous voyageâtes /vwa.ja.ʒat/
- ils;elles voyagèrent /vwa.ja.ʒɛʁ/
Passé composé
- je ai voyagé
- tu as voyagé
- il;elle;on a voyagé
- nous avons voyagé
- vous avez voyagé
- ils;elles ont voyagé
Plus-que-parfait
- je avais voyagé
- tu avais voyagé
- il;elle;on avait voyagé
- nous avions voyagé
- vous aviez voyagé
- ils;elles avaient voyagé
Futur antérieur
- je aurai voyagé
- tu auras voyagé
- il;elle;on aura voyagé
- nous aurons voyagé
- vous aurez voyagé
- ils;elles auront voyagé
Passé antérieur
- je eus voyagé
- tu eus voyagé
- il;elle;on eut voyagé
- nous eûmes voyagé
- vous eûtes voyagé
- ils;elles eurent voyagé
- je voyageasse /vwa.ja.ʒas/
- tu voyageasses /vwa.ja.ʒas/
- il;elle;on voyageât /vwa.ja.ʒa/
- nous voyageassions /vwa.ja.ʒa.sjɔ̃/
- vous voyageassiez /vwa.ja.ʒa.sje/
- ils;elles voyageassent /vwa.ja.ʒas/
- je aie voyagé
- tu aies voyagé
- il;elle;on ait voyagé
- nous ayons voyagé
- vous ayez voyagé
- ils;elles aient voyagé
- je eusse voyagé
- tu eusses voyagé
- il;elle;on eût voyagé
- nous eussions voyagé
- vous eussiez voyagé
- ils;elles eussent voyagé
Conditionnel
- je voyagerais /vwa.jaʒ.ʁɛ/
- tu voyagerais /vwa.jaʒ.ʁɛ/
- il;elle;on voyagerait /vwa.jaʒ.ʁɛ/
- nous voyagerions /vwa.ja.ʒə.ʁjɔ̃/
- vous voyageriez /vwa.ja.ʒə.ʁje/
- ils;elles voyageraient /vwa.jaʒ.ʁɛ/
- je aurais voyagé
- tu aurais voyagé
- il;elle;on aurait voyagé
- nous aurions voyagé
- vous auriez voyagé
- ils;elles auraient voyagé
- tu voyage /vwa.jaʒ/
Other verbs
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The remarkable twin Voyager spacecraft continue to explore the outer reaches of the solar system decades after they completed their surveys of the Outer Planets. Launched in 1977 (September 5 for Voyager 1 (V1) and August 20 for Voyager 2 (V2), whose trajectory took it past Jupiter after Voyager 1), the spacecraft pair made many fundamental discoveries as they flew past Jupiter (March 1979 for V1, July 1979 for V2) and Saturn (November 1980 for V1, August 1981 for V2). The path of Voyager 2 past Saturn was targeted so that it continued within the plane of the solar system, allowing it to become the first spacecraft to visit Uranus (January 1986) and Neptune (August 1989). Following the Neptune encounter, both spacecraft started a new phase of exploration under the intriguing title of the Voyager Interstellar Mission.
Five instruments continue to collect important measurements of magnetic fields, plasmas, and charged particles as both spacecraft explore different portions of the solar system beyond the orbits of the planets. Voyager 1 is now more than 118 astronomical units (one AU is equal to the average orbital distance of Earth from the Sun) distant from the sun, traveling at a speed (relative to the sun) of 17.1 kilometers per second (10.6 miles per second). Voyager 2 is now more than 96 AU from the sun, traveling at a speed of 15.5 kilometers per second (9.6 miles per second). Both spacecraft are moving considerably faster than Pioneers 10 and 11, two earlier spacecraft that became the first robotic visitors to fly past Jupiter and Saturn in the mid-70s.
This processed color image of Jupiter was produced in 1990 by the U.S. Geological Survey from a Voyager image captured in 1979. The colors have been enhanced to bring out detail. Zones of light-colored, ascending clouds alternate with bands of dark, descending clouds. The clouds travel around the planet in alternating eastward and westward belts at speeds of up to 540 kilometers per hour. Tremendous storms as big as Earthly continents surge around the planet. The Great Red Spot (oval shape toward the lower-left) is an enormous anticyclonic storm that drifts along its belt, eventually circling the entire planet.
As seen in the night sky at Earth, Voyager 1 is within the confines of the constellation Ophiuchus, only slightly above the celestial equator; no telescope can see it, but radio contact is expected to be maintained for at least the next ten years. Voyager 2 is within the bounds of the constellation Telescopium (which somehow sounds quite appropriate) in the far southern night sky.
Both spacecraft have already passed something called the Termination Shock † (December 2004 for V1, August 2007 for V2), where the solar wind slows as it starts to interact with the particles and fields present between the stars. It is expected that both spacecraft will encounter the Heliopause, where the solar wind ceases as true interstellar space begins, from 10 to 20 years after crossing the Termination Shock. Theories exist for what should be present in interstellar space, but the Voyagers will become the first man-made objects to go beyond the influences of the Sun, hopefully returning the first measurements of what it is like out there. Each spacecraft is carrying a metal record with encoded sounds and sights from Earth, along with the needle needed to read the recordings, and simplified instructions for where the spacecraft came from, in case they are eventually discovered by intelligent extra-terrestrials.
Keep track of the Voyager spacecraft on the official Voyager Interstellar Mission website or follow @NASAVoyager2 on Twitter. † The sun ejects a continuous stream of charged particles (electrons, protons, etc) that is collectively termed the solar wind. The particles are traveling extremely fast and are dense enough to form a very tenuous atmosphere; the heliosphere represents the volume of space where the effects of the solar wind dominate over those of particles in interstellar space. The solar wind particles are moving very much faster than the local speed of sound represented by their low volume density. When the particles begin to interact with interstellar particles and fields (the interaction can be either physically running into other particles or experiencing an electromagnetic force resulting from a charged particle moving within a magnetic field), then they start to slow down. The point at which they become subsonic (rather than their normal hypersonic speed) is the Termination Shock.
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The most distant human-made object
No spacecraft has gone farther than NASA's Voyager 1. Launched in 1977 to fly by Jupiter and Saturn, Voyager 1 crossed into interstellar space in August 2012 and continues to collect data.
Mission Type
What is Voyager 1?
Voyager 1 has been exploring our solar system for more than 45 years. The probe is now in interstellar space, the region outside the heliopause, or the bubble of energetic particles and magnetic fields from the Sun.
- Voyager 1 was the first spacecraft to cross the heliosphere, the boundary where the influences outside our solar system are stronger than those from our Sun.
- Voyager 1 is the first human-made object to venture into interstellar space.
- Voyager 1 discovered a thin ring around Jupiter and two new Jovian moons: Thebe and Metis.
- At Saturn, Voyager 1 found five new moons and a new ring called the G-ring.
In Depth: Voyager 1
Voyager 1 was launched after Voyager 2, but because of a faster route, it exited the asteroid belt earlier than its twin, having overtaken Voyager 2 on Dec. 15, 1977.
Voyager 1 at Jupiter
Voyager 1 began its Jovian imaging mission in April 1978 at a range of 165 million miles (265 million km) from the planet. Images sent back by January the following year indicated that Jupiter’s atmosphere was more turbulent than during the Pioneer flybys in 1973–1974.
Beginning on January 30, Voyager 1 took a picture every 96 seconds for a span of 100 hours to generate a color timelapse movie to depict 10 rotations of Jupiter. On Feb. 10, 1979, the spacecraft crossed into the Jovian moon system and by early March, it had already discovered a thin (less than 30 kilometers thick) ring circling Jupiter.
Voyager 1’s closest encounter with Jupiter was at 12:05 UT on March 5, 1979 at a range of about 174,000 miles (280,000 km). It encountered several of Jupiter’s Moons, including Amalthea, Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto, returning spectacular photos of their terrain, opening up completely new worlds for planetary scientists.
The most interesting find was on Io, where images showed a bizarre yellow, orange, and brown world with at least eight active volcanoes spewing material into space, making it one of the most (if not the most) geologically active planetary body in the solar system. The presence of active volcanoes suggested that the sulfur and oxygen in Jovian space may be a result of the volcanic plumes from Io which are rich in sulfur dioxide. The spacecraft also discovered two new moons, Thebe and Metis.
Voyager 1 at Saturn
Following the Jupiter encounter, Voyager 1 completed an initial course correction on April 9, 1979 in preparation for its meeting with Saturn. A second correction on Oct. 10, 1979 ensured that the spacecraft would not hit Saturn’s moon Titan.
Its flyby of the Saturn system in November 1979 was as spectacular as its previous encounter. Voyager 1 found five new moons, a ring system consisting of thousands of bands, wedge-shaped transient clouds of tiny particles in the B ring that scientists called “spokes,” a new ring (the “G-ring”), and “shepherding” satellites on either side of the F-ring—satellites that keep the rings well-defined.
During its flyby, the spacecraft photographed Saturn’s moons Titan, Mimas, Enceladus, Tethys, Dione, and Rhea. Based on incoming data, all the moons appeared to be composed largely of water ice. Perhaps the most interesting target was Titan, which Voyager 1 passed at 05:41 UT on November 12 at a range of 2,500 miles (4,000 km). Images showed a thick atmosphere that completely hid the surface. The spacecraft found that the moon’s atmosphere was composed of 90% nitrogen. Pressure ad temperature at the surface was 1.6 atmospheres and 356 °F (–180°C), respectively.
Atmospheric data suggested that Titan might be the first body in the solar system (apart from Earth) where liquid might exist on the surface. In addition, the presence of nitrogen, methane, and more complex hydrocarbons indicated that prebiotic chemical reactions might be possible on Titan.
Voyager 1’s closest approach to Saturn was at 23:46 UT on 12 Nov. 12, 1980 at a range of 78,000 miles(126,000 km).
Voyager 1’s ‘Family Portrait’ Image
Following the encounter with Saturn, Voyager 1 headed on a trajectory escaping the solar system at a speed of about 3.5 AU per year, 35° out of the ecliptic plane to the north, in the general direction of the Sun’s motion relative to nearby stars. Because of the specific requirements for the Titan flyby, the spacecraft was not directed to Uranus and Neptune.
The final images taken by the Voyagers comprised a mosaic of 64 images taken by Voyager 1 on Feb. 14, 1990 at a distance of 40 AU of the Sun and all the planets of the solar system (although Mercury and Mars did not appear, the former because it was too close to the Sun and the latter because Mars was on the same side of the Sun as Voyager 1 so only its dark side faced the cameras).
This was the so-called “pale blue dot” image made famous by Cornell University professor and Voyager science team member Carl Sagan (1934-1996). These were the last of a total of 67,000 images taken by the two spacecraft.
Voyager 1’s Interstellar Mission
All the planetary encounters finally over in 1989, the missions of Voyager 1 and 2 were declared part of the Voyager Interstellar Mission (VIM), which officially began on Jan. 1, 1990.
The goal was to extend NASA’s exploration of the solar system beyond the neighborhood of the outer planets to the outer limits of the Sun’s sphere of influence, and “possibly beyond.” Specific goals include collecting data on the transition between the heliosphere, the region of space dominated by the Sun’s magnetic field and solar field, and the interstellar medium.
On Feb. 17, 1998, Voyager 1 became the most distant human-made object in existence when, at a distance of 69.4 AU from the Sun when it “overtook” Pioneer 10.
On Dec. 16, 2004, Voyager scientists announced that Voyager 1 had reported high values for the intensity for the magnetic field at a distance of 94 AU, indicating that it had reached the termination shock and had now entered the heliosheath.
The spacecraft finally exited the heliosphere and began measuring the interstellar environment on Aug. 25, 2012, the first spacecraft to do so.
On Sept. 5, 2017, NASA marked the 40th anniversary of its launch, as it continues to communicate with NASA’s Deep Space Network and send data back from four still-functioning instruments—the cosmic ray telescope, the low-energy charged particles experiment, the magnetometer, and the plasma waves experiment.
The Golden Record
Each of the Voyagers contain a “message,” prepared by a team headed by Carl Sagan, in the form of a 12-inch (30 cm) diameter gold-plated copper disc for potential extraterrestrials who might find the spacecraft. Like the plaques on Pioneers 10 and 11, the record has inscribed symbols to show the location of Earth relative to several pulsars.
The records also contain instructions to play them using a cartridge and a needle, much like a vinyl record player. The audio on the disc includes greetings in 55 languages, 35 sounds from life on Earth (such as whale songs, laughter, etc.), 90 minutes of generally Western music including everything from Mozart and Bach to Chuck Berry and Blind Willie Johnson. It also includes 115 images of life on Earth and recorded greetings from then U.S. President Jimmy Carter (1924– ) and then-UN Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim (1918–2007).
By January 2024, Voyager 1 was about 136 AU (15 billion miles, or 20 billion kilometers) from Earth, the farthest object created by humans, and moving at a velocity of about 38,000 mph (17.0 kilometers/second) relative to the Sun.
National Space Science Data Center: Voyager 1
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Beyond Earth: A Chronicle of Deep Space Exploration
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The Voyager missions
Highlights Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 launched in 1977 and made a grand tour of the solar system's outer planets. They are the only functioning spacecraft in interstellar space, and they are still sending back measurements of the interstellar medium. Each spacecraft carries a copy of the golden record, a missive from Earth to any alien lifeforms that may find the probes in the future.
What are the Voyager missions?
The Voyager program consists of two spacecraft: Voyager 1 and Voyager 2. Voyager 2 was actually launched first, in August 1977, but Voyager 1 was sent on a faster trajectory when it launched about two weeks later. They are the only two functioning spacecraft currently in interstellar space, beyond the environment controlled by the sun.
Voyager 2’s path took it past Jupiter in 1979, Saturn in 1981, Uranus in 1985, and Neptune in 1989. It is the only spacecraft to have visited Uranus or Neptune, and has provided much of the information that we use to characterize them now.
Because of its higher speed and more direct trajectory, Voyager 1 overtook Voyager 2 just a few months after they launched. It visited Jupiter in 1979 and Saturn in 1980. It overtook Pioneer 10 — the only other spacecraft in interstellar space thus far — in 1998 and is now the most distant artificial object from Earth.
How the Voyagers work
The two spacecraft are identical, each with a radio dish 3.7 meters (12 feet) across to transmit data back to Earth and a set of 16 thrusters to control their orientations and point their dishes toward Earth. The thrusters run on hydrazine fuel, but the electronic components of each spacecraft are powered by thermoelectric generators that run on plutonium. Each carries 11 scientific instruments, about half of which were designed just for observing planets and have now been shut off. The instruments that are now off include several cameras and spectrometers to examine the planets, as well as two radio-based experiments. Voyager 2 now has five functioning instruments: a magnetometer, a spectrometer designed to investigate plasmas, an instrument to measure low-energy charged particles and one for cosmic rays, and one that measures plasma waves. Voyager 1 only has four of those, as its plasma spectrometer is broken.
Jupiter findings
Over the course of their grand tours of the solar system, the Voyagers took tens of thousands of images and measurements that significantly changed our understanding of the outer planets.
At Jupiter, they gave us our first detailed ideas of how the planet’s atmosphere moves and evolves, showing that the Great Red Spot was a counter-clockwise rotating storm that interacted with other, smaller storms. They were also the first missions to spot a faint, dusty ring around Jupiter. Finally, they observed some of Jupiter’s moons, discovering Io’s volcanism, finding the linear features on Europa that were among the first hints that it might have an ocean beneath its surface, and granting Ganymede the title of largest moon in the solar system, a superlative that was previously thought to belong to Saturn’s moon Titan.
Saturn findings
Next, each spacecraft flew past Saturn, where they measured the composition and structure of Saturn’s atmosphere , and Voyager 1 also peered into Titan’s thick haze. Its observations led to the idea that Titan might have liquid hydrocarbons on its surface, a hypothesis that has since been verified by other missions. When the two missions observed Saturn’s rings, they found the gaps and waves that are well-known today. Voyager 1 also spotted three previously-unknown moons orbiting Saturn: Atlas, Prometheus, and Pandora.
Uranus and Neptune findings
After this, Voyager 1 headed out of the solar system, while Voyager 2 headed toward Uranus . There, it found 11 previously-unknown moons and two previously-unknown rings. Many of the phenomena it observed on Uranus remained unexplained, such as its unusual magnetic field and an unexpected lack of major temperature changes at different latitudes.
Voyager 2’s final stop, 12 years after it left Earth, was Neptune. When it arrived , it continued its streak of finding new moons with another haul of 6 small satellites, as well as finding rings around Neptune. As it did at Uranus, it observed the planet’s composition and magnetic field. It also found volcanic vents on Neptune’s huge moon Triton before it joined Voyager 1 on the way to interstellar space.
Interstellar space
Interstellar space begins at the heliopause, where the solar wind – a flow of charged particles released by the sun – is too weak to continue pushing against the interstellar medium, and the pressure from the two balances out. Voyager 1 officially entered interstellar space in August 2012, and Voyager 2 joined it in November 2018.
These exits were instrumental in enabling astronomers to determine where exactly the edge of interstellar space is, something that’s difficult to measure from within the solar system. They showed that interstellar space begins just over 18 billion kilometers (about 11 billion miles) from the sun. The spacecraft continue to send back data on the structure of the interstellar medium.
After its planetary encounters, Voyager 1 took the iconic “Pale Blue Dot” image , showing Earth from about 6 billion kilometers (3.7 billion miles) away. As of 2021 , Voyager 1 is about 155 astronomical units (14.4 billion miles) from Earth, and Voyager 2 is nearly 129 astronomical units (12 billion miles) away.
The golden records
Each Voyager spacecraft has a golden phonograph record affixed to its side, intended as time capsules from Earth to any extraterrestrial life that might find the probes sometime in the distant future. They are inscribed with a message from Jimmy Carter, the U.S. President at the time of launch, which reads: “This is a present from a small, distant world, a token of our sounds, our science, our images, our music, our thoughts and our feelings. We are attempting to survive our time so we may live into yours.”
The covers of the records have several images inscribed, including visual instructions on how to play them, a map of our solar system’s location with respect to a set of 14 pulsars, and a drawing of a hydrogen atom. They are plated with uranium – its rate of decay will allow any future discoverers of either of the records to calculate when they were created.
The records’ contents were selected by a committee chaired by Carl Sagan. Each contains 115 images, including scientific diagrams of the solar system and its planets, the flora and fauna of Earth, and examples of human culture. There are natural sounds, including breaking surf and birdsong, spoken greetings in 55 languages, an hour of brainwave recordings, and an eclectic selection of music ranging from Beethoven to Chuck Berry to a variety of folk music.
Learn more Voyager Mission Status Bulletin Archives Experience A Message From Earth - Inspired by the Voyager Golden Record Neptune, planet of wind and ice
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Interstellar Mission
Voyager 1 reached interstellar space in August 2012 and is the most distant human-made object in existence.
Mission Statistics
Launch Date
Sept. 5, 1977
About the mission
Voyager 1 reached interstellar space in August 2012 and is the most distant human-made object in existence. Launched just shortly after its twin spacecraft, Voyager 2, in 1977, Voyager 1 explored the Jovian and Saturnian systems discovering new moons, active volcanoes and a wealth of data about the outer solar system.
Voyagers 1 and 2 were designed to take advantage of a rare planetary alignment that occurs only once in 176 years and remain the most well traveled spacecraft in history. Both spacecraft carry a sort of time capsule called the Golden Record, a 12-inch gold-plated copper disk containing sounds and images selected to portray the story of our world to extraterrestrials.
Instruments
- Imaging system
- Infrared interferometer spectrometer
- Ultraviolet spectrometer
- Triaxial fluxgate magnetometer
- Plasma spectrometer
- Low-energy charged particles detectors
- Cosmic Ray System (CRS)
- Photopolarimeter System (PPS)
- Plasma Wave System (PWS)
Mission Highlights
Sept. 1, 2013
Interactive 3D model of Voyager 1. View the full interactive experience at Eyes on the Solar System .
- The Contents
- The Making of
- Where Are They Now
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Q & A with Ed Stone
golden record
Where are they now.
- frequently asked questions
- Q&A with Ed Stone
December 12, 2023
Engineers Working to Resolve Issue With Voyager 1 Co...
October 23, 2023.
NASA’s Voyager Team Focuses on Software Patch, Thrus...
July 28, 2023.
NASA Mission Update: Voyager 2 Communications Pause
April 27, 2023.
NASA's Voyager Will Do More Science With New Power S...
October 25, 2022.
Edward Stone Retires After 50 Years as NASA Voyager'...
August 30, 2022.
Engineers Solve Data Glitch on NASA's Voyager 1
August 17, 2022.
Voyager, NASA's Longest-Lived Mission, Logs 45 Years...
May 18, 2022.
Engineers Investigating NASA's Voyager 1 Telemetry Data
June 29, 2021.
Proud Past, Strong Future: RPS at 60
May 11, 2021, as nasa's voyager 1 surveys interstellar space, its ..., november 2, 2020.
NASA Contacts Voyager 2 Using Upgraded Deep Space Ne...
July 9, 2020.
NASA's Deep Space Station in Australia Is Getting an...
March 25, 2020.
Revisiting Decades-Old Voyager 2 Data, Scientists Fi...
March 4, 2020.
NASA's Deep Space Antenna Upgrades to Affect Voyager...
January 28, 2020.
Voyager 2 Returns to Normal Operations
November 4, 2019.
Voyager 2 Illuminates Boundary of Interstellar Space
August 22, 2019.
30 Years Ago: Voyager 2's Historic Neptune Flyby
July 8, 2019.
A New Plan for Keeping NASA's Oldest Explorers Going
May 22, 2019.
Shaw Prize in Astronomy Awarded to Ed Stone
December 10, 2018.
NASA's Voyager 2 Probe Enters Interstellar Space
December 6, 2018.
Space memory: Voyager gift for Pres. George H.W. Bush
October 5, 2018.
NASA Voyager 2 Could Be Nearing Interstellar Space
December 1, 2017.
The Voyagers in Popular Culture
Voyager 1 Fires Up Thrusters After 37 Years
August 30, 2017.
NASA and Iconic Museum Honor Voyager Spacecraft 40th...
August 17, 2017.
An Insider's Guide to Voyager: 1977-2017
August 2, 2017.
Two Voyagers Taught Us How to Listen to Space
July 31, 2017.
First and Farthest: How the Voyagers Blazed Trails
NASA's Voyager Spacecraft Still Reaching for the Sta...
April 24, 2017.
NASA's Cassini, Voyager Missions Suggest New Picture...
August 24, 2016.
35 Years On, Voyager's Legacy Continues at Saturn
January 22, 2016.
Voyager Mission Celebrates 30 Years Since Uranus
October 29, 2015.
Voyager 1 Helps Solve Interstellar Medium Mystery
February 13, 2015.
'Pale Blue Dot' Images Turn 25
December 15, 2014.
NASA Voyager: 'Tsunami Wave' Still Flies Through Int...
August 25, 2014.
25 Years After Neptune: Reflections on Voyager
August 21, 2014.
Voyager Map Details Neptune's Strange Moon Triton
July 23, 2014.
NASA Voyager Statement About Solar Wind Models
July 17, 2014.
Voyager Project Scientist Ed Stone Honored
July 7, 2014.
Sun Sends More 'Tsunami Waves' to Voyager 1
December 4, 2013.
Voyager Project Scientist Honored by NASA — Vi...
September 12, 2013.
How Do We Know When Voyager Reaches Interstellar Space?
Voyager 1 Has Entered Interstellar Space
NASA Spacecraft Embarks on Historic Journey Into Int...
August 20, 2013.
Dr. Edward C. Stone Receives 35th Howard Hughes Memo...
August 15, 2013.
NASA Voyager Statement about Competing Models to Exp...
June 27, 2013
NASA's Voyager 1 Explores Final Frontier of Our 'Sol...
April 24, 2013.
NASA Invites the Public to Fly Along with Voyager
March 20, 2013.
NASA Voyager Status Update on Voyager 1 Location
December 3, 2012.
NASA Voyager 1 Encounters New Region in Deep Space
October 8, 2012.
NASA's Voyager Receives 'Breakthrough Award'
September 5, 2012.
Cheers, Voyager: 35 Years of Exploration
August 20, 2012.
Voyager at 35: Break on Through to the Other Side
August 3, 2012.
Signs Changing Fast for Voyager at Solar System Edge
June 14, 2012.
Data From NASA's Voyager 1 Point to Interstellar Future
January 17, 2012.
Voyager Instrument Cooling After Heater Turned off
December 5, 2011.
NASA's Voyager Hits New Region at Solar System Edge
November 14, 2011.
Voyager 2 Completes Switch to Backup Thruster Set
November 5, 2011.
Voyager 2 to Switch to Backup Thruster Set
June 15, 2011.
Recalculating the Distance to Interstellar Space
June 9, 2011.
Probes Suggest Magnet Bubbles At Solar System Edge
April 28, 2011.
Voyager Set to Enter Interstellar Space
April 27, 2011.
Five Things About NASA's Voyager Mission
March 8, 2011.
Voyager Seeks The Answer Blowin' In The Wind
January 21, 2011.
Voyager Celebrates 25 Years Since Uranus Visit
December 13, 2010.
NASA Probe Sees Solar Wind Decline
November 11, 2010.
Saturn Then and Now: 30 Years Since Voyager Visit
October 29, 2010.
New Project Manager as Voyager Explores New Territory
June 28, 2010.
Voyager 2 at 12,000 Days: The Super-Marathon Continues
May 24, 2010.
Engineers Diagnosing Voyager 2 Data System
February 12, 2010.
Voyager Celebrates 20-Year-Old Valentine to Solar Sy...
July 2, 2008.
Voyager Squashes View of Solar System
Voyages Through the Heliosphere
December 10, 2007.
Voyager 2 Proves Solar System is Squashed
Voyager 2 Proves Solar System Is Squashed
August 20, 2007.
Voyager's Many Discoveries
Pioneering NASA Spacecraft Mark Thirty Years of Flight
Voyager at 30: Looking Beyond and Within
August 15, 2006.
Voyager 1: 'The Spacecraft That Could' Hits New Mile...
May 23, 2006.
Voyager: Living on the Edge of the Solar System
September 23, 2005.
Voyager Finds Three Surprises Near Our Solar System'...
May 24, 2005.
What's It Like Where Voyager Is?
Voyager enters Solar System's Final Frontier
January 5, 2005.
Voyagers Surpass 10,000 Days Of Operation
July 13, 2004.
Voyager 1, Prepare for Action
July 8, 2004.
Blast Wave Blows Through the Solar System
November 5, 2003.
Voyager 1 Approaches Solar System's Final Frontier
October 11, 2002.
Chaos Seen in Movement of Ring-Herding Moons of Saturn
August 28, 2002.
Programs Will Share Excitement of Voyager Discoveries
August 19, 2002.
Howdy, Strangers
August 16, 2002.
25 Years Later, Voyager Mission Keeps Pushing the Sp...
April 9, 2002.
Record Set for Most-Distant Spacecraft Maintenance
April 8, 2002.
Voyager Maintenance from 7 Billion Miles Away
March 1, 2001.
Evidence Seen For Wet Past on Ganymede, Jupiter's La...
December 18, 2000.
Most Distant Spacecraft May Reach Shock Zone Soon
November 17, 1998.
Voyager 2, Back to Normal Flight Operations After Co...
February 13, 1998.
Voyager 1, Now Most Distant Human-made Object in Space
December 23, 1997.
Voyager Project Manager George Textor to Retire
September 2, 1997.
Two Voyager Spacecraft Still Going Strong After 20 Y...
June 10, 1997.
Legacy of JPL's Voyager Missions Highlighted in Even...
May 26, 1993.
Voyager 1 & 2 Discovers Evidence of the Heliopause
October 23, 1991.
Voyagers Continues to Return Data from The Edges of ...
February 12, 1990.
Voyager 1 to Take Pictures of Solar System Planets
December 1, 1989, voyager's science papers presented at american geoph....
Triton Moon Regenerating Surface
November 16, 1989.
New JPL Appointments
October 26, 1989.
Interruption of Voyager 2 Telemetry Signal
October 2, 1989.
Voyager 2 Discovers Eruption on Triton
August 18, 1989.
Voyager 2 Detects Intense Radio Emissions
August 16, 1989.
Usuda Deep Space Center Joins Voyager 2 Mission
August 15, 1989.
Voyager 2 News Updates
August 3, 1989.
Voyager 2 Reveals Three Additional Neptune Moons
July 7, 1989.
Voyager 2 Discovers New Neptune Moon
June 5, 1989.
Voyager 2 Enters Final Planetary Encounter
April 20, 1989.
Voyager 2 Spacecraft Completes Last Change-of-Course...
April 11, 1989.
Neptune's Ring Arcs Found
November 11, 1988.
Voyager 2 Change-of-course Maneuver Successful
March 14, 1988.
Rank Prize Awarded to JPL Engineers
August 7, 1987.
Voyager Celebrates Its 10th Anniversary
May 14, 1987.
NASA Voyagers Provides Precise Measurement of New Co...
March 9, 1987.
Voyager Project Wins the Nelson P. Jackson Aerospace...
September 19, 1986.
NASA Highest Honors Awarded to Voyager Teams
February 18, 1986.
Voyager 2 Prepares for 1989 Neptune Flyby
January 16, 1986.
Six Addition Uranus Moons Found
January 1, 1985.
New Uranus Moon Discovered
February 1, 1982.
Four New Satellites of Saturn Found
December 14, 1979.
Radio Contact with Voyager 1 Re-Established
December 13, 1979.
Radio Contact with Voyager 1 Lost
December 4, 1979.
Voyager 1 Light-Sensing Instrument Non-operational
August 1, 1977.
IMAGES
COMMENTS
Conjugate the French verb voyager in all tenses: future, participle, present, indicative, subjunctive. Irregular verbs, auxiliary verbs, conjugation rules and conjugation models in French verb conjugation. Translate voyager in context, with examples of use and definition.
Conjugate the French Verb "Voyager". In French, the verb voyager means "to travel." This is easy to remember if you associate traveling with a voyage. When you want to say things such as "I traveled" or "we are traveling" in French, the verb needs to be conjugated. A short lesson will introduce you to the most basic conjugations of voyager .
La conjugaison du verbe voyager sa définition et ses synonymes. Conjuguer le verbe voyager à indicatif, subjonctif, impératif, infinitif, conditionnel, participe, gérondif.
Present je voyage tu voyages il/elle voyage nous voyagions vous voyagiez ils/elles voyagent. Imperfect je voyageasse tu voyageasses il/elle voyageât nous voyageassions vous voyageassiez ils/elles voyageassent. ... la balle de golf le palet la planche de snowboard les protège-tibias. SPORTS EQUIPMENT.
Conjugate the French verb voyager in several modes, tenses, voices, numbers, persons : indicative mode, subjunctive, imperative mood, conditional, participle form, gerund, present, past, future perfect, progressive. The-conjugation.com. Menu. Other languages available English ... Sélectionne la forme conjuguée du verbe acheter à l'impératif ...
Past Participle: voyagé Present Participle: voyageant Auxilliary verb: Avoir Irregular forms are in red. Auxilliary verbs are in blue. Print. Positive Negative. Voyager - Indicative. Positive Negative. Présent. je voyage je ne voyage pas tu voyages tu ne voyages pas il/elle voyage il/elle ne voyage pas
Visit the Progress with Lawless French Q+A forum to get help from native French speakers and fellow learners. Support Lawless French This free website is created with love and a great deal of work. If you love it, please consider making a one-time or monthly donation.. Your support is entirely optional but tremendously appreciated.
Verb voyage au masculin à la voix active avec l'auxiliaire avoir. Definition and spelling of verb voyage. Sport24 | Evene | La Chaîne Météo ... voyager: je voyage: Indicative present: Singular 1 st person: voyager: il voyage: Indicative present: Singular 3 rd person: voyager: que je voyage: Subjunctive present: Singular 1 st person:
Conjugate the verb voyager in all tenses: present, past, participle, present perfect, gerund, etc. Conjugation of voyager - French verb | PONS English
A list of the common conjugations for the French verb voyager, along with their English translations. This is a literary tense, i.e. a tense used in writing, in everyday speech the Passé Composé is used to refer to past actions. The French Future Perfect or Futur antérieur is made with the future tense of avoir or être and the past ...
PRESENT je voyage tu voyages il voyage nous voyageons vous voyagez ils voyagent: PASSÉ SIMPLE je voyageai tu voyageas il voyagea nous voyageâmes vous voyageâtes ils voyagèrent: IMPERFECT je voyageais tu voyageais il voyageait nous voyagions vous voyagiez ils voyageaient: FUTURE je voyagerai tu voyageras il voyagera
Conjugation of the verb Voyager in all tenses: future, present and past. 🎮 Conjugation trainer for memorizing forms. Conjugation of the verb Voyager in all tenses: future, present and past. 🎮 Conjugation trainer for memorizing forms. ... voyager: voyageant /vwa.ja.ʒɑ̃/ voyagé /vwa.ja.ʒe/ Trainer Settings. Break into pronouns ...
Instrument Status. This is a real-time indicator of Voyagers' distance from Earth in astronomical units (AU) and either miles (mi) or kilometers (km). Note: Because Earth moves around the sun faster than Voyager 1 is speeding away from the inner solar system, the distance between Earth and the spacecraft actually decreases at certain times of year.
Toutes les conjugaisons du verbe voyager Ne pas voyager | Voyager au féminin | Voyager à la forme interrogative | Liste des verbes classés par groupe de conjugaison Verbes du premier groupe | Verbes du deuxième groupe | Verbes du troisième groupe. Conjuguer voyager avec lalanguefrancaise.com - Ces conjugaisons du verbe voyager sont données à titre indicatif.
Voyager 2 is now more than 96 AU from the sun, traveling at a speed of 15.5 kilometers per second (9.6 miles per second). Both spacecraft are moving considerably faster than Pioneers 10 and 11, two earlier spacecraft that became the first robotic visitors to fly past Jupiter and Saturn in the mid-70s. This processed color image of Jupiter was ...
Voyage is excited to present episode 4 of The Introverted Entrepreneur Success Stories show with our wonderful host and sales expert... Heart to Heart with Whitley: Episode 4. You are going to love our next episode where Whitley interviews the incredibly successful, articulate and inspiring Monica Stockhausen.
Voyager 1 was the first spacecraft to cross the heliosphere, the boundary where the influences outside our solar system are stronger than those from our Sun. Voyager 1 is the first human-made object to venture into interstellar space. Voyager 1 discovered a thin ring around Jupiter and two new Jovian moons: Thebe and Metis.
They are the only two functioning spacecraft currently in interstellar space, beyond the environment controlled by the sun. Voyager 2's path took it past Jupiter in 1979, Saturn in 1981, Uranus in 1985, and Neptune in 1989. It is the only spacecraft to have visited Uranus or Neptune, and has provided much of the information that we use to ...
But you can't use j'y voyage when you are talking about a place you plan to go e.g.: ... Oui j'y voyage. in this case you should use the verb "aller" in the present tense. Vas-tu en France ? Oui j'y vais. OR Oui je vais y aller. Share. Improve this answer. Follow edited Jun 17, 2020 at 9:38. Community Bot. 1. answered May 18, 2019 at 10:18 ...
Present Status. As of April 2020, Voyager 1 is at a distance of 22.3 billion kilometers (149.0 AU) from the Sun. ... Voyager 1, which is traveling up away from the plane of the planets, entered interstellar space on Aug. 25, 2012. Voyager 2, which is headed away from the sun beneath the plane of the planets, reached interstellar space on Nov. 5 ...
Voyager 1 reached interstellar space in August 2012 and is the most distant human-made object in existence. Launched just shortly after its twin spacecraft, Voyager 2, in 1977, Voyager 1 explored the Jovian and Saturnian systems discovering new moons, active volcanoes and a wealth of data about the outer solar system. Voyagers 1 and 2 were ...
This is a real-time indicator of Voyager 1's distance from Earth in astronomical units (AU) and either miles (mi) or kilometers (km). Note: Because Earth moves around the sun faster than Voyager 1 is speeding away from the inner solar system, the distance between Earth and the spacecraft actually decreases at certain times of year.
Voyager 2 Discovers Eruption on Triton. Five-mile-tall, geyser-like plume of dark material has been discovered erupting from the surface of Neptune's moon Triton in one of the images returned last month to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., by NASA's Voyager 2 spacecraft. August 18, 1989.