How long would it take Voyager 1 to reach Andromeda?

... and even if we ignored that - it would need 3.3 billion years for the journey at the current distance. And that's just 3,299,999,980 years after the power supply ran out.
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How long will it take for Voyager 1 to leave the galaxy?

But it will take about 300 years for Voyager 1 to reach the inner edge of the Oort Cloud and possibly about 30,000 years to fly beyond it.
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How long did Voyager 1 take to cross the Milky Way?

By 500 million years from now, the solar system and the Voyagers alike will complete a full orbit through the Milky Way.
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How long would it take a rocket to reach the Andromeda Galaxy?

Time dilation

For example, a rocket that accelerated at standard acceleration due to gravity toward the Andromeda Galaxy and started to decelerate halfway through the trip would arrive in about 28 years, from the frame of reference of the observer.
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How long does it take a signal to reach Voyager 1?

Voyager 1 is currently over 7 billion miles (about 11 billion kilometers) away from Earth and is still transmitting -- it takes about 10 hours for the signal to travel from the spacecraft to Earth!
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Ask a Spaceman: How long would it take to reach the nearest galaxy?



Will Voyager 1 leave the Milky Way?

It is doubtful that the spacecraft will ever be able to leave the Milky Way, as they would have to attain a velocity of 1000 kilometers/second, and unless they get a huge, huge, huge velocity boost from something unexpected, they will probably end up being in the Milky Way's rotation forever.
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How long will Voyager 1 battery last?

Voyager 1 is expected to keep working until 2025 when it will finally run out of power. None of this would be possible without the spacecraft's three batteries filled with plutonium-238. In fact, Most of what humanity knows about the outer planets came back to Earth on plutonium power.
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Will humans ever travel at the speed of light?

So will it ever be possible for us to travel at light speed? Based on our current understanding of physics and the limits of the natural world, the answer, sadly, is no.
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How far is Blackhole from Earth?

The EHT team's results are being published today in a special issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters. Because the black hole is about 27,000 light-years away from Earth, it appears to us to have about the same size in the sky as a donut on the Moon.
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Is warp drive faster than light?

A warp drive is a device that distorts the shape of the space-time continuum. A spacecraft equipped with a warp drive may travel at speeds greater than that of light by many orders of magnitude.
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How long would Voyager take to reach Alpha Centauri?

It will take 20,000 years for our earliest probes to reach Alpha Centauri. Some of the earliest explorations of the universe beyond our solar system were made by four probes launched by NASA in the 1970s — Pioneer 10 and 11 and Voyager 1 and 2.
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Will Voyager 1 ever return?

Nope. They have small amounts of hydrazine fuel left and have no possible way to slow down and head back. They are traveling very fast (Voyager 1 is at 38,088 mph or 17.027 km/s relative to the sun) and have very little ability to change speed now.
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Has anything left the Milky Way?

On November 5, 2018, Voyager 2 officially left the solar system as it crossed the heliopause, the boundary that marks the end of the heliosphere and the beginning of interstellar space.
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Will Voyager 1 slow down?

Voyager 1 is moving away from our solar system so fast that it could make it from the Sun to the Earth - a 93 million mile trip - in 3 months and a week. Both spacecraft are slowing down, but this is because they're still escaping the gravitational pull of our Sun.
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Will Voyager ever hit anything?

The probability of Voyager colliding with any matter any time soon is unknown, but likely small. We have no way of detecting small outer solar system objects, because they are small and far away.
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Has Voyager reached the Oort Cloud?

No missions have been sent to explore the Oort Cloud yet, but five spacecraft will eventually get there. They are Voyager 1 and 2, New Horizons, and Pioneer 10 and 11. The Oort Cloud is so distant, however, that the power sources for all five spacecraft will be dead centuries before they reach its inner edge.
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Did nasa find a black hole?

Following six years of meticulous observations, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has, for the first time ever, provided direct evidence for a lone black hole drifting through interstellar space by a precise mass measurement of the phantom object.
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Are we orbiting a black hole?

But again, no worries, we are still a very long way away from the black hole at the center of our galaxy, and won't be getting anywhere near it. Scientists also want to use VERA to look at many more objects, including ones that are close to the black hole.
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What will happen to Earth in 5 billion years?

Scientists have long known the fate of our solar system – and likely the fate of Earth itself. In a few billion years, the Sun will run out of fusion fuel and expand to a “red giant” phase, likely swallowing everything in the solar system up to the orbit of Mars.
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When can you leave Earth at the age of 15?

If you leave Earth at the age of 15 in a spaceship at the speed of light and spend 5 Years in space, when you get back on Earth you will be 20 years old and all your friends who were 15 when you left will be 65 years old. This phenomenon is known as "Time Dilation" in Physics.
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What is 1% the speed of light?

While 1% of anything doesn't sound like much, with light, that's still really fast – close to 7 million miles per hour! At 1% the speed of light, it would take a little over a second to get from Los Angeles to New York. This is more than 10,000 times faster than a commercial jet.
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Is warp speed possible?

“None of the physically conceivable warp drives can accelerate to speeds faster than light,” Bobrick says. That is because you would require matter capable of being ejected at speeds faster than light—but no known particles can travel that fast.
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Can Voyager 1 still take pictures?

There will be no more pictures; engineers turned off the spacecraft's cameras, to save memory, in 1990, after Voyager 1 snapped the famous image of Earth as a “pale blue dot” in the darkness. Out there in interstellar space, where Voyager 1 roams, there's “nothing to take pictures of,” Dodd said.
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Where will Voyager end up?

Voyager will venture near enough to that star, which is 46.9 light-years from the sun, to possibly break into its Oort cloud (the blur of cosmic objects a star is surrounded by past its planets). That would be a hypothetical Oort cloud, since we don't know if that star actually has one.
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Can we see Voyager 1 with telescope?

Just as with the Apollo landing sites, actually seeing or imaging the interstellar probes is impossible: the spacecraft are simply too small (the transmitter dish on the Voyagers, for example, is only about 12 feet in diameter) and their distance from us too great, for any telescope to resolve them.
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