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NASA's Golden
Gift to the Aliens
In a few months, NASA scientists and the press
will note the passing of the 30th anniversary
since the launches of Voyagers I and II. By now,
both interstellar probes have passed beyond Pluto's
orbit and are speeding out toward neighboring
star systems, carrying with them copies of the
Golden Record, a phonograph record full of images,
music and recordings of life on Earth intended
for any extraterrestrials who might happen upon
the probe and wonder who sent it. It's the same
idea behind the plaque that was bolted onto the
Pioneer 10 and 11 spacecraft, both of which are
currently gliding out of the solar system behind
the Voyager probes.
While many Americans have heard of the record,
most probably don't remember just what was on
it. Fortunately, you can find the amazing images,
which were chosen over the course of six months
by a committee headed by Carl Sagan, compiled
here.
Today it's unlikely that we would choose to include
this gee-whiz shot of the U.N. headquarters; or
this greenhouse gas nightmare in India to portray
ourselves. Not that we'd do so much better now
than we did then; the aliens would probably be
just as confused by a photo of President Bush,
or an image of a kid using a laptop, or a YouTube
video of Dancing with the Stars.
It was the late '70s when these pictures were
chosen, and Carl Sagan was probably smoking a
lot of grass, but that doesn't quite explain some
of the stranger images. What is this picture,
exactly, and who let Archie Bunker in?
Although the images don't always work, there's
something admirable and humble about creating
a record like this in the infinitesimal chance
that it would be discovered by other intelligent
beings. You could argue that launching a photo
album of the human race is the height of egotism,
or you can take President Jimmy Carter at his
word when he says, in a message on the record:
"Of the 200 million stars in the Milky Way
galaxy, some - perhaps many - may have inhabited
planets and spacefaring civilizations. If one
such civilization intercepts Voyager and can understand
these recorded contents, here is our message:
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. We hope someday, having solved the
problems we face, to join a community of galactic
civilizations. This record represents our hope
and our determination and our goodwill in a vast
and awesome universe."
For better or worse, we don't really do things
like this anymore. New Horizons, the last spacecraft
NASA launched that will eventually pass beyond
the edge of the solar system, carries the ashes
of the man who discovered Pluto, along with a
piece of another spacecraft, an American flag
and, for some reason (probably because people
paid for the privilege), the names of more than
430,000 people stored on a CD. Apparently we've
replaced attempts at interstellar communication
with marketing stunts that will seem far kitschier
in 30 years than Sagan's Golden Record does today.
Kevin Friedl, www.Popsci.com, May 9th, 2007
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