Voyager 2's Neptune Encounter: Solar System's Greatest Cosmic Finale Podcast Por  arte de portada

Voyager 2's Neptune Encounter: Solar System's Greatest Cosmic Finale

Voyager 2's Neptune Encounter: Solar System's Greatest Cosmic Finale

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# This is your Astronomy Tonight podcast.

Good evening, stargazers! Today is November 17th, and we're diving into one of the most thrilling nights in modern astronomical history!

On this very date in 1989, Voyager 2 made its closest approach to Neptune, humanity's first and—let's be honest—probably our only close encounter with the windy blue giant in the foreseeable future. This wasn't just a casual flyby, folks. This was the grand finale of the greatest road trip our solar system has ever seen.

Picture this: After traveling for nearly 4.4 billion miles over 12 years, Voyager 2 came within 3,000 miles of Neptune's cloud tops—closer than some satellite orbits around Earth! And what did it find? A world of absolute cosmic drama. Neptune revealed itself to be far more active and turbulent than anyone expected. We discovered the fastest winds in the entire solar system—screaming along at nearly 1,200 miles per hour. That's faster than a Formula 1 race car on its best day!

The spacecraft also discovered six new moons and found that the planet's rings were way more complex than we thought. And that's not even mentioning the discovery of the Great Dark Spot, a storm system the size of Jupiter itself!

This incredible mission showed us that even the distant, lonely outer planets have endless surprises waiting for us.

Be sure to **subscribe to the Astronomy Tonight podcast** so you never miss these cosmic moments! If you want more information, check out **Quiet Please dot AI**.

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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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