What NASA's Voyager Probes Are Carrying Into Deep Space for Aliens to Find on the Golden Record
Aishwarya Kapoor | Times Life Bureau | Jul 11, 2026, 07:52 IST
What NASA's Voyager Probes Are Carrying Into Deep Space for Aliens to Find on the Golden Record
Image credit : Times Life Bureau
Launched in 1977, NASA's Voyager probes are now the farthest human-made objects in deep space, and both carry a golden record packed with sounds, images, and a pulsar map pointing back to Earth. If aliens ever intercept them, here is exactly what they will find, and why the scientists who built this message believed it could actually work.
The Bottle, the Ocean, the Odds
The record was not a symbolic gesture. Carl Sagan chaired the committee that built it. The team had roughly six weeks to decide what humanity would say to the universe, and they took the job with the seriousness it deserved. The result is one of the strangest and most carefully reasoned objects ever made.
Both probes have now crossed into interstellar space, beyond the heliosphere, the bubble of solar wind that defines the edge of our solar system. Voyager 1 crossed that boundary in 2012. Voyager 2 followed in 2018. They are the only human-made objects in deep interstellar space. At current speed, Voyager 1 will take about 40,000 years to pass within 1.6 light-years of any other star. The record has time on its side.
What the Golden Record Actually Contains
Inside the audio tracks: 116 images encoded as analogue signals, including diagrams of human anatomy, the structure of DNA, photographs of the Indian Ocean, a nursing mother, rush-hour traffic, and the Great Wall of China. There is a mathematical definition of the number one. There is a photograph of a supermarket.
The sounds are stranger and more affecting. The record carries 55 greetings in different human languages, including a message in Sanskrit recorded by a professor at Cornell. It carries the sound of a mother kissing her child. Rain. Surf. Wind. A chimpanzee. A tractor. A train. Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode." A Navajo night chant. A Peruvian wedding song. Kesarba Patel's "Jaat Kahan Ho", a north Indian classical piece that made the final cut alongside Bach and Mozart.
There is also a spoken message from then-UN Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim, and a message from U.S. President Jimmy Carter, which reads in part: "We are attempting to survive our time so we may live into yours."
The Pulsar Map and the Problem of Being Found
The same map appeared earlier on the Pioneer plaques, attached to Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11, which were launched in 1972 and 1973. Those plaques also showed a nude man and woman, which generated considerable controversy on Earth, far more, it turned out, than among any aliens.
Frank Drake, who designed the pulsar map and co-designed the record with Sagan, was also the author of the Drake Equation, the formula that estimates the number of communicating civilisations in the galaxy. Drake never claimed the probes would be found. The record was designed on the assumption that the attempt itself mattered, that building it carefully was the point, regardless of outcome.
Why the Record Was Built the Way It Was
The greeting in Sanskrit was included because Sanskrit's grammatical precision made it, in the view of some linguists on the team, among the most logically structured of human languages, a quality that might help an alien civilisation parse meaning from phonetics. Whether that reasoning holds is a separate question. The committee believed it did.
The record also carries a one-hour recording of the brainwaves of Ann Druyan, who was, at the time of the recording, newly in love with Carl Sagan. She meditated on the history of Earth, on human suffering, on what it meant to be alive. That recording sits on both probes now, moving at roughly 61,000 kilometres per hour through interstellar space. It is the most private thing humanity has ever sent anywhere.
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory still receives signals from both Voyager probes. The signal from Voyager 1 takes more than 22 hours to reach Earth at the speed of light. Engineers communicate with spacecraft launched before most of their team members were born, using 1970s hardware and modern software patches, keeping the mission alive year after year.
What Happens Next
The record itself is built to last. Gold-plated copper does not corrode in the vacuum of space. The aluminium jacket protects it from micrometeorite damage. Scientists estimate the disc could remain playable for more than a billion years. Whether anyone will play it is, of course, unknowable.
What the Voyager record actually is, not what it might become, is a document of one species at one specific moment, deciding that the attempt at contact was worth making even with no expectation of reply. The pulsar map locates Earth in the galaxy. The Sanskrit greeting and the Kesarba Patel raga and Ann Druyan's brainwaves locate something harder to map: the particular texture of being human in the late twentieth century, which is the only century we had when the probes were launched. Both probes carry that texture into deep space at the same speed, on the same disc, with no way to know if the message will ever arrive at anything that can read it, and no way to unsend it now.