Voyager Golden Record

[2] Carl Sagan noted that "The spacecraft will be encountered and the record played only if there are advanced space-faring civilizations in interstellar space, but the launching of this 'bottle' into the cosmic 'ocean' says something very hopeful about life on this planet.Sagan and his associates assembled 116 images (one used for calibration) and a variety of natural sounds, such as those made by surf, wind, thunder and animals (including the songs of birds and whales).The first images are of scientific interest, showing mathematical and physical quantities, the Solar System and its planets, DNA, and human anatomy and reproduction.The musical selection is also varied, featuring works by composers such as J. S. Bach (interpreted by Glenn Gould), Mozart, Beethoven (played by the Budapest String Quartet), and Stravinsky."[11] The selection of music for the record was completed by a team composed of Carl Sagan as project director, Linda Salzman Sagan, Frank Drake, Alan Lomax, Ann Druyan as creative director, artist Jon Lomberg, ethnomusicologist Robert E. Brown, Timothy Ferris as producer, and Jimmy Iovine as sound engineer.[11] During the recording of the brainwaves, Druyan thought of many topics, including Earth's history, civilizations and the problems they face, and what it was like to fall in love.Jimmy Iovine, who was still early in his career as a music producer, served as sound engineer for the project at the recommendation of John Lennon, who was contacted to contribute but was unable to take part.[18] In the 1978 book Murmurs of Earth, the failure to secure permission for the song is cited as one of the legal challenges faced by the team compiling the Voyager Golden Record.[19] In the book, Sagan said that the Beatles favoured the idea, but "[they] did not own the copyright, and the legal status of the piece seemed too murky to risk."[20] When asked about the obstacle presented by EMI with regard to "Here Comes the Sun", despite the artists' wishes, Ann Druyan said in 2015: "Yeah, that was one of those cases of having to see the tragedy of our planet.The information in the upper right-hand portion of the cover is designed to show how pictures are to be constructed from the recorded signals.The drawing immediately below shows how these lines are to be drawn vertically, with staggered "interlace" to give the correct picture rendition.The drawing in the lower left-hand corner of the cover is the pulsar map previously sent as part of the plaques on Pioneers 10 and 11.[31] On September 12, 2013, NASA announced that Voyager 1 had left the heliosheath and entered interstellar space,[32] although it still remains within the Sun's gravitational sphere of influence.
Explanation of the Voyager record cover diagram, as provided by NASA
Preparation for the record's packaging before the launch of Voyager 2
The golden record is attached to the spacecraft.
Golden Disc AwardsVoyagerphonograph recordsVoyager spacecraftraster scanextraterrestrial lifetime capsuleVoyager 1light-yearsGliese 445CamelopardalisCarl Sagancivilizationsinterstellar space'bottle' into the cosmic 'ocean'farthest human-made objectgalactic plasmaPioneer 10plaqueVoyager 2humansPresidentJimmy CarterContents of the Voyager Golden RecordCornell UniversitywhalesSecretary-GeneralKurt WaldheimPer aspera ad astraMorse codeNick SaganSolar Systemanatomyreproductionchemical compositionuniverseJ. S. BachGlenn GouldMozartBeethovenBudapest String QuartetStravinskyGuan PinghuBlind Willie JohnsonChuck BerryKesarbai KerkarValya BalkanskaLaurie SpiegelAzerbaijani folk musicMughamKamil JalilovJohnny B. GoodeLinda Salzman SaganFrank DrakeAlan LomaxAnn DruyanJon LombergRobert E. BrownTimothy FerrisJimmy IovineRoger PayneSongs of the Humpback WhalepulsarPioneer plaqueJohn LennonBeatlesHere Comes the SunSoundCloudJupiterArecibo ObservatoryIsaac NewtonPhilosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematicaphonograph recordbinary notationfundamental transition of the hydrogen atomtelevisionrasterpulsarshydrogen atomCréteilCBS RecordsBoulder, Coloradolacquer mastersGardena, Californiaaluminumelectroplateduranium-238half-lifemass spectrometrytermination shockKuiper beltRoss 248AndromedaheliosheathF. D. DrakeLinda SalzmanCD-ROMBillions and BillionsKickstarterGrammy AwardBrandenburg Concerto No. 2 in F Major, BWV 1047Karl RichterJohann Sebastian BachPuspåwarnåMangkunegara IVTom DjäwaGoro YamaguchiPartita for Violin Solo No. 3 in E Major, BWV 1006Arthur GrumiauxThe Magic FluteHell's Vengeance Boils in My HeartEdda MoserBavarian State OperaWolfgang SawallischWolfgang Amadeus MozartChakruloGeorgian State Merited Ensemble of Folk Song and DanceLouis Armstrong and His Hot SevenWalter MelroseThe Rite of SpringColumbia Symphony OrchestraIgor StravinskyThe Well-Tempered ClavierPrelude and Fugue No. 1 in C Major, BWV 870Symphony No. 5 in C MinorPhilharmonia OrchestraOtto KlempererLudwig van BeethovenIzlel e Delyu HaydutinEarly Music Consort of LondonDavid MunrowAnthony HolborneHuancavelicaJohn CohenDark Was the Night, Cold Was the GroundString Quartet No. 13 in B-flat MajorArecibo messageCommunication with extraterrestrial intelligenceThe AtlanticJet Propulsion LaboratoryWayback MachineNatalie AngierThe SmithsonianBibcodeLos Angeles TimesSagan, CarlDrake, Frank D.Lomberg, JonSagan, Linda SalzmanDruyan, AnnFerris, TimothyThe New York TimesPitchforkThe Washington PostWikimedia CommonsContentsVoyager programBrandenburg ConcertoBeethoven's String Quartet No. 13Partita for Violin No. 3, BWV 1006Izlel ye Delyo HaydutinPrelude and Fugue in C major, BWV 870, from The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book IIPuspawarnaQueen of the Night aria from The Magic FluteBeethoven's Symphony No. 5Louis Armstrongand His Hot SevenMünchener Bach-OrchesterEarly Music ConsortK. P. H. NotoprojoGorō YamaguchiInterstellar communicationsActive SETIBreakthrough InitiativesBreakthrough ListenBreakthrough MessageSearch for extraterrestrial intelligenceList of interstellar radio messagesA Message from EarthAcross the UniverseBracewell probeCosmic CallCosmicOSHello from EarthTeen Age MessageHans FreudenthalSebastian von HoernerNikolai KardashevIosif ShklovskyAleksandr ZaitsevAlien languageArchaeology, Anthropology, and Interstellar CommunicationAstrobiologyAstrolinguisticsDrake equationLincosFermi paradoxPrix GuzmanSan Marino ScaleMHW-RTGCosmic Ray SubsystemInfrared interferometer spectrometer and radiometerPlasma Wave SubsystemPale Blue DotFamily PortraitStamatios KrimigisCarolyn PorcoRaymond HeacockJim BlinnLarry SoderblomEdward C. StoneGravity assistRadioisotope thermoelectric generatorTitan IIIEGrand Tour programRings of JupiterNASA Deep Space NetworkPrometheusDunyazadShahrazadThe FarthestProject A119Faint young Sun paradoxCosmic CalendarVoyager Family PortraitThe Planetary SocietyExtraordinary claims require extraordinary evidenceThe Cosmic ConnectionMars and the Mind of ManThe Dragons of EdenBroca's BrainCosmosThe Cold and the DarkShadows of Forgotten AncestorsThe Demon-Haunted WorldThe Varieties of Scientific ExperienceContactGod, the Universe and Everything ElseWanderersLynn MargulisDorion SaganSasha SaganCarl Sagan Memorial AwardCarl Sagan MedalCarl Sagan Award for Public Appreciation of ScienceCarl Sagan Prize for Science PopularizationCarl Sagan InstituteSagan Planet WalkCarl Sagan Memorial Station2709 SaganSymphony of Science900 Stewart AvenuePolicycreationNational Aeronautics and Space ActSpace Task GroupRogersSpace Exploration InitiativeAugustineCFUSAIVision for Space ExplorationAldridgeSpace RaceAdministrator and Deputy AdministratorChief ScientistAstronaut CorpsRanks and positionsBudgetNASA researchspinoff technologiesNASA TVNASA SocialLaunch Services ProgramMercury Control CenterManned Space Flight NetworkKennedy Space CenterVehicle Assembly BuildingLaunch Complex 39Launch Complex 48Launch Control CenterOperations and Checkout BuildingJohnson Space CenterMission ControlLunar Sample LaboratoryScience Mission DirectorateHuman spaceflightsuborbitalMercuryGeminiApolloSkylabApollo–SoyuzSoviet space programSpace ShuttleShuttle–MirRoscosmosConstellationInternational Space StationCommercial Orbital Transportation ServicesCommercial CrewArtemisLunar GatewayRoboticHitchhikerMarinerMariner Mark IIMars Surveyor '98New MillenniumLunar OrbiterPioneerPlanetary ObserverRangerSurveyorVikingProject PrometheusMars ExplorationMars Exploration RoverLiving With a StarLunar Precursor Robotic ProgramEarth Observing SystemGreat Observatories programExplorersDiscoveryNew FrontiersSolar Terrestrial ProbesCommercial Lunar Payload ServicesSIMPLExmissionsApollo 11Mercury 3Mercury-Atlas 6MagellanPioneer 11GalileotimelineSpitzer Space TelescopeSojourner roverSpirit roverMESSENGERAquariusCassiniKepler space telescopeOpportunity roverobservedRHESSIInSightIngenuity helicopterflightsMars Reconnaissance Orbiter2001 Mars OdysseyNew HorizonsHubble Space TelescopeTHEMISCuriosity roverGOES 14Lunar Reconnaissance OrbiterGOES 15Van Allen ProbesSolar Dynamics ObservatoryMars Science LaboratoryNuSTAROSIRIS-RExTransiting Exoplanet Survey SatelliteMars 2020Perseverance roverJames Webb Space TelescopeEuropa ClipperNancy Grace Roman Space TelescopeDAVINCIVERITASCommunicationsand navigationNear Earth NetworkSpace NetworkDeep Space NetworkGoldstoneMadridCanberraSpace Flight Operations FacilityDeep Space Atomic ClockAstronautsby nameby yearGemini astronautsApollo astronautsSpace Shuttle crewsNASA aircraftNASA missionsuncrewed missionsApollo missionsSpace Shuttle missionsUnited States rocketsNASA cancellationsNASA cameras on spacecraftEarthriseThe Blue MarblePillars of CreationMystic MountainSolar System Family PortraitThe Day the Earth SmiledFallen AstronautDeep fieldsLunar plaquesPioneer plaquesApollo 11 goodwill messagesNASA insigniaGemini and Apollo medallionsMission patchesHubble Space Telescope anniversary imagesWe choose to go to the MoonApollo 8 Genesis readingApollo 15 postal covers incidentApollo Lunar ModuleSpace Mirror MemorialThe Astronaut MonumentLunar sample displaysMoon rocksstolen or missingU.S. Astronaut Hall of FameSpace program on U.S. stampsApollo 17 Moon miceMoon treeNASA International Space Apps ChallengeAstronauts DayNational Astronaut DayNikon NASA F4