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Voyager 2
Voyager 2 Mission to Jupiter Voyager 2 Mission to Saturn Voyager 2 Mission to Uranus Voyager 2 Mission to Neptune Voyager 2 Mission to Beyond Our Solar System
Voyager 2:
Voyager 2's exciting flyby of Neptune capped the historic Grand Tour of the outer solar system, taking advantage of a rare planetary alignment to visit the four giant outer planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune over the course of 12 years. Voyager 2 skimmed the north pole of Neptune by a mere 4800 kilometers (3000 miles), and determined basic characteristics of Neptune and its largest moon Triton: color, cloud-top features, size, mass, composition, temperature, and rotation rate. Voyager 2 found six new Neptunian moons and three new rings plus a broad sheet of ring material. Unexpectedly, geysers of gaseous nitrogen were found on the largest moon, Triton. Neptune's magnetic field also confounded: tilted 47 degrees with respect to the rotational axis, and offset from the center of the planet by half the planet's radius. Voyager 2's flight path past Neptune sent the spacecraft diving below the ecliptic plane, where it continues its search today for the heliopause (the boundary between the Sun's influence and interstellar space).

Visit the Voyager 2 Website

   
Key Dates Headlines
20 Aug 1977: 
Launch
9 Jul 1979: 
Jupiter Flyby (Closest Approach)
26 Aug 1981: 
Saturn Flyby (Closest Approach)
24 Jan 1986: 
Uranus Flyby (Closest Approach)
24 Aug 1989: 
Neptune Flyby (Closest Approach)
Status: 
Headed to Interstellar Space
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