Well that was horrifying lol. Like some found footage shit. This massive object just jitterring outta the darkness to eat Voyager 1.
eris_aka_draculadrug on
God it doesn’t even look real
LessRespects on
We need a new modern deep space probe
lifeintraining on
r/killthecameraman
dazednarcissit on
What causes the vibrations in the images taken? Just them redirectioning Voyager 1 to make the gravity assist or is there anything else making the images jittery when animated?
Blink-184-isok on
Something about this is so eerie. Something you’d see from The Twilight Zone.
S30econdstoMars on
Insane detail: because of the close flyby of Titan, Voyager 1 gained the gravitational boost that threw it out of the ecliptic plane. It literally sacrificed going to Uranus/Neptune to give us incredible data about Titan.
Herculumbo on
Someone needs to lay off the caffeine
MrScandium on
The OG Invincible edit
_xiphiaz on
Since these are photos stitched to make a video I can’t imagine why the didn’t choose to align them..
doktorjose on
Good to see the little fella still getting some publicity in this “Moon” frenzy era
Sorry-Climate-7982 on
Yeah, I think I’d have the jitters too if I was approaching that slicing machine.
Tbone_Trapezius on
All with pencils, paper, and slide rules.
HotepYoda on

This guy taking the pics? Seriously though, it’s wicked cool
reddsal on
Seems like this could be stabilized today….
CounterSimple3771 on
Did Voyager slingshot around Jupiter?
Jkreegz on
I can’t put my finger on why, really, but this is oddly terrifying
PurpleSailor on
Saw this on the news and then a few months later the National Geographic Magazine hit and the pictures were absolutely amazing compared to anything that we had seen before.
The_Angster_Gangster on
Is the jittering an added effect?
unhindered-coconut on
Unbelievable
Biglight__090 on
The radiation levels would be absolutely insane
theeccentricnucleus on
You can watch the complete approaches of Voyager I and II to the four giant planets on YouTube. The links are attached below. There are lots of tight and wide shots of the planets back to back along with copious amounts of noise and static, so it’s quite disorienting. It’s best if you reduce the playback speed to the slowest setting possible to make it a little easier to watch. When the probes are still and centered, you can really see the rotation of the planets and their moons. It’s marvelous and eerie.
23 Comments
Well that was horrifying lol. Like some found footage shit. This massive object just jitterring outta the darkness to eat Voyager 1.
God it doesn’t even look real
We need a new modern deep space probe
r/killthecameraman
What causes the vibrations in the images taken? Just them redirectioning Voyager 1 to make the gravity assist or is there anything else making the images jittery when animated?
Something about this is so eerie. Something you’d see from The Twilight Zone.
Insane detail: because of the close flyby of Titan, Voyager 1 gained the gravitational boost that threw it out of the ecliptic plane. It literally sacrificed going to Uranus/Neptune to give us incredible data about Titan.
Someone needs to lay off the caffeine
The OG Invincible edit
Since these are photos stitched to make a video I can’t imagine why the didn’t choose to align them..
Good to see the little fella still getting some publicity in this “Moon” frenzy era
Yeah, I think I’d have the jitters too if I was approaching that slicing machine.
All with pencils, paper, and slide rules.

This guy taking the pics? Seriously though, it’s wicked cool
Seems like this could be stabilized today….
Did Voyager slingshot around Jupiter?
I can’t put my finger on why, really, but this is oddly terrifying
Saw this on the news and then a few months later the National Geographic Magazine hit and the pictures were absolutely amazing compared to anything that we had seen before.
Is the jittering an added effect?
Unbelievable
The radiation levels would be absolutely insane
You can watch the complete approaches of Voyager I and II to the four giant planets on YouTube. The links are attached below. There are lots of tight and wide shots of the planets back to back along with copious amounts of noise and static, so it’s quite disorienting. It’s best if you reduce the playback speed to the slowest setting possible to make it a little easier to watch. When the probes are still and centered, you can really see the rotation of the planets and their moons. It’s marvelous and eerie.
[Voyager I & II – Jupiter Encounter Observations – RAW Images](https://youtu.be/bf5QJ8iFxUs?si=RF3BT5amRoaAUgiv)
[Voyager I & II – Saturn Encounter Observations – RAW Images](https://youtu.be/nJBedpsJUKU?si=GmvVxoqFydj9M7dh)
[Voyager II – Uranus Encounter Observations – RAW Images](https://youtu.be/hcRlis-ssdA?si=cI1cDSRHOjzTKWU_)
[Voyager II – Neptune Encounter Observations – RAW Images](https://youtu.be/i99wqvYvhog?si=MYoOWdT8nDM9Ch4G)
Man what a shit cameraman thought NASA could hire better tbh …/s