Planetary Radio: Space Exploration, Astronomy and Science - The Edward Stone Voyager Exploration Trail
Episode Date: January 29, 2025This week on Planetary Radio, we celebrate the enduring legacy of Ed Stone, the longtime project scientist for NASA’s Voyager mission and former director of JPL. Mat Kaplan, senior communication...s advisor at The Planetary Society, takes us to the unveiling of the Dr. Edward Stone Voyager Exploration Trail at JPL, where we hear from past and present JPL leaders, Voyager mission team members, and Ed Stone’s family. Plus, we kick off the episode with the much-anticipated launch of Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket and wrap up with What’s Up, as Bruce Betts explores the rare planetary configuration that made Voyager’s Grand Tour possible. Discover more at: https://www.planetary.org/planetary-radio/2025-ed-stone-trailSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Let's take a hike on the Dr. Edward Stone memorial trail, this week on Planetary Radio.
I'm Sarah Al-Ahmed of the Planetary Society, with more of the human adventure across our
solar system and beyond.
Some people have lasting impact on the space science community long after they're gone, like Ed Stone.
He was the director of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory for a decade, and the longtime project scientist of the beloved Voyager mission.
Ed Stone passed away last year, but his legacy lives on in the Officer, shares the unveiling of the Dr. Edward
Stone Exploration Trail at JPL, which honors his career and the Voyager mission.
You'll hear from past and present directors of JPL, leaders on the Voyager mission team,
and members of Ed Stone's family.
But we begin with the much anticipated launch of Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket.
Eyes up, SpaceX.
A new orbital commercial rocket has entered the chat.
And stick around for What's Up with Dr. Bruce Betts
as we talk about the rare planetary configuration
that allowed Voyager to tour our solar system
in the 1970s and 80s.
If you love planetary radio
and want to stay informed about the latest space discoveries,
make sure that you hit that subscribe button
on your favorite podcasting platform. By subscribing, you'll never miss an episode filled with new and awe-inspiring
ways to know the cosmos and our place within it. As promised, we begin with a launch. Blue Origin's
new Glenn rocket achieved orbit on its first attempt on January 16, 2025. It took off from
Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, marking a significant milestone for the
company. The NG-1 launch was the first from Space Launch Complex 36 in 20 years. While the primary
goal of reaching orbit was accomplished, the booster was lost during the descent. Still,
the success of New Glenn is a major step for Blue Origin, a commercial space company that had
previously only launched its suborbital New Shepard vehicle. Our Senior Communications Advisor and the creator of Planetary Radio,
Matt Kaplan, joins me now to discuss. Hey Matt, thanks for joining me.
Always a pleasure, Sarah.
And in a little bit we're going to be hearing more about your adventure to JPL for the dedication
of the Voyager Trail, but before we get into that, there is a moment
in commercial space history that we've all been looking forward to for quite a while,
the launch of New Glenn rocket. I'm imagining no one has looked forward to this more or maybe
longer than Jeff Bezos, who of course is the main power behind Blue Origin. you know it has been years and this rocket is years
over date but they pulled it off January 16th they a reasonably successful first
launch got payload into orbit even though they lost the booster which had
this great name so you're telling me there's a chance that's the name and I
didn't know they named that that's so funny pretty clever but they
considered it a success and I'm inclined to agree it's it's it's a darn big
rocket yeah it didn't really occur to me how large this rocket was until I went
to go actually visit the Blue Origin rocket factory yes we were I was so
envious as even though I was there on the Cape while you were doing your tour
yeah and I'm sure listeners of the show have heard part of this story because we Yes, I was so envious, even though I was there on the Cape while you were doing your tour.
Yeah, and I'm sure listeners of the show have heard part of this story because we had a
large number of people from our team that were in Florida to go see the launch of the
Artemis I rocket, which didn't actually launch.
But in the days after, Bruce Betts and I actually got to go to this Blue Origin rocket factory.
And in the Rotunda, they have a new Shepard rocket.
And right next to it, they have this little display
of the size of New Shepard versus their dreams
for what New Glenn was gonna be like.
And after seeing all those giant rocket parts
down on the factory floor, it kind of clicked with me
how large this rocket is in comparison
to what they had tried before.
And in comparison even to a lot of the other rockets,
the Atlas's, the Delta's, and a lot of the other boosters from around the world, it occurred to me while I was looking into
all of this, if it weren't for the SpaceX super heavy starship, we would be
just, everybody would be just all over the New Glenn because it is huge at over
320 feet and a seven meter fairing which is gigantic but it has to now compete
with Super Heavy Starship which is of course substantially larger.
I mean a 9 meter fairing among other things but still very impressive and when you compare
it to the Falcon 9 which as I said that's really where its main competition is, as Blue Origin sees it.
It is quite a large rocket,
and it's capable of getting a lot of stuff up to space,
and it has a lot of payloads waiting for it
to be fully operational.
Well, they've been waiting quite a while
because it took a little bit to get this rocket going,
but it's wonderful to know that they already have business
so they can keep going with this rocket
and see what its capabilities actually are.
We've had SpaceX kind of monopolizing, for better or worse, this commercial space, launch
space, because they were the only ones capable of doing it.
And in this time, they've succeeded hundreds of times in launching things into orbit.
But now we have a competitor, which means not only will they have to jockey against
each other for being the best launch system, but also it means there's more opportunity for even more
people to launch things into space.
And we're going to need those rockets in this coming space age.
Yes, I think you're right there.
And the need is, you can already see it when you look at the launch manifest for New Glenn,
the very next launch, which is still a test launch, is going to carry components that Blue Origin is working on for their
human landing system
human lander that's going to carry astronauts to the moon someday as
contracted by NASA and it's going to carry like life support systems that they want to test out on orbit and then the one after that
will be starting the escapade twin spacecraft on their way to Mars. So there's a whole lot of stuff
coming up and a lot of need for these new launch vehicles.
I've been looking forward to Escapade but probably just because so much of it
was built at my alma mater, UC Berkeley. They're blue and gold.
Yeah.
This is a wonderful moment and a good time to remember that Blue Origin
was the company that managed to land, first successfully land a rocket on Earth after
launching and then coming back. Of course, SpaceX managed to accomplish it again with an orbital
rocket just a month later, but it's really wonderful seeing them have this moment where
they finally succeeded and launched this rocket because it's been a long time coming.
Absolutely, and that New Shepard,
I don't really know what the future is for New Shepard,
whether they're going to continue those suborbital flights
above the von Karman line,
but I hadn't really thought about that,
that you were absolutely right.
First rocket to make it past that von Karman line
with the arbitrary edge of space and come back down and land on its tail in one very safe piece. I
Remember that night someone sitting next to me who didn't know what was going on but was watching this live stream with all of us
Turned around and was like are they running that video backwards?
They're just making history
Nope, they're just making history. Science fiction stuff, man.
That's stuff I grew up on.
So in a moment, we're going to be hearing your trip to JPL and all the wonderful things
that happened there.
But listeners of the show in the last two weeks will know that we had to postpone this
segment for a little bit because we were impacted by the Eaton fires in this area.
And the people over at JPL have had some significant losses because of this fire.
So before we go into the segment, I wanted to take a moment to talk about that and the
difficulty that the people over at JPL are facing right now. It's absolutely awful. And of course,
the number of people affected who are members of the JPL staff, which is now about 5,500 people
after the recent reductions in staff.
So real double whammy for them.
That's a tiny fraction of everyone who has been displaced
or affected by the Eaton fire,
the fire that destroyed the community of Altadena
and touched so many others nearby.
But over 200 staff members at JPL lost their homes, which is just so
tragic and mind-boggling.
And you know, I guess the good news, it is good news, is that I've been told by the
folks at JPL, no fire damage on the JPL campus, only damage because of the winds were gusting to 100 miles an hour
during that horrible, horrible 24 hours or so. But our hearts go out to all of those people who now
are, you know, looking for a home as they try to advance our plans in space exploration.
It was really difficult watching that go down over the course of a week because it wasn't
just JPL that was under threat.
It was also Griffith Observatory.
It was also Mount Wilson.
It was so many of the beloved space science institutions in our area.
And I'm really glad to report that they all made it through the fire.
But the space science community in this area is really hurting as we try to figure out
where people are going to find their new homes and how we're going to get back to our new normal. So I'm really glad that there
are institutions like Caltech that are organizing fundraisers specifically to help this community.
This is so great. I had heard about this, but you sent me the link and I'm sure you're going to share
it on this week's episode page. It is a great way to support these people from JPL who are now in
dire straits and it is really wonderful to see Caltech reaching out and giving us the opportunity
to help out this way. Well if it's any indication I know our team is very small and a few people on
our team did lose their homes and seeing the outpouring of love that we've gotten from the
space community and everyone trying to bolster each other. I know that there are so many people out there
that want to help support the people over at JPL because they made so many of the missions
that we care so deeply about. So I will, I'll share that link online. And if there's any
way that you can help or reach out to the people in your life that have been impacted
by these fires, I know they would really appreciate hearing from you and having that support.
Yeah, hear, hear.
Well, thank you for all of this, Matt. And I'm excited to hear the rest of your journey
to JPL. And I'm so glad that the Voyager Trail is still there.
It is still there. And folks, if you get a chance to take a tour of JPL, go there during
the open house, you can have your shot and we'll have information
about that too, but Sarah, as always, great talking to you.
Great talking to you too, Matt.
Thank you so much.
In December, 2024, Matt was invited to attend
a very special event at NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab,
which is not that far away from our headquarters
here in Pasadena, California.
The devastating Eaton fire that affected our area
caused us to delay sharing this with you.
But with JPL's encouragement and the happy news
that the facility is still standing,
we present you now with the unveiling
of the Dr. Ed Stone Exploration Trail.
Planetary science and exploration
are still relatively new fields,
but they've been around long enough
for us to suffer the loss of many pioneers.
We lost one of the greatest when Dr. Edward Stone passed away in June of 2024.
It was the flight of Sputnik 1 in 1957 that turned this budding physicist toward planetary science.
Ed was the only project scientist on the Voyager mission for 50 years.
His decade as director of the Jet Propulsion Lab began in the middle of that service.
I interviewed him for Planetary Radio several times.
I always left these sessions with the same admiration for Ed that thousands of others
shared.
So, I was delighted when I received an invitation in December
for the dedication of the Edward Stone Voyager Trail at JPL. I wasn't alone. Many of Ed's
colleagues, friends, and family members also gathered on the lab's beautiful mall for a brief
ceremony. They included Planetary Society co-founder and former leader of Mars
exploration at JPL, Louis Friedman. Later in our coverage, you'll hear me walk a bit of the trail
with two old and very distinguished friends, but we'll start with a relatively new friend.
Representing the Planetary Society with me that morning was our great director of government relations, Jack Kirley.
I wish this was your first trip to JPL, but I guess you're still a newbie, Jack.
Yeah, it's only my second time on lab, so it's really exciting to be here and for such a momentous
occasion. And to be surrounded by such an amazing crowd. I mean, I think I quipped to you when we
got here, like this really is the who's who of planetary
science and space exploration.
It's really exciting to be here with the luminaries of this field.
And these are the people who are doing the work that you do your work on behalf of in
a sense, right?
Yes, absolutely.
I mean, this is what we strive for, right?
These amazing missions, whether it's Voyager, strive for, right? With these amazing missions,
whether it's Voyager, you know, the tour through the solar system, or Cassini, Galileo, Magellan,
these amazing missions that have a legacy here on lab and across the country. It's really an honor
of a lifetime for me to be able to advocate for more of these in the future, so that we can continue to expand our knowledge
of the solar system and worlds beyond.
I remember being in elementary school
and then seeing the first, well,
Humanities Only Images Institute of Uranus and Neptune,
thanks to the work of Dr. Stone,
and being some of those early images and memories I have
of what humanity is capable of in space.
So to be here to be part of this dedication
is really kind of a homecoming, I think,
for a lot of people, but this is really empowering for me
and is gonna be some energy that I'll bring back
when I return to DC next week to talk to legislators
and staff and folks part of the incoming administration to advance science.
Lori Leschin has led JPL since May of 2022,
the first woman to take on that responsibility.
She was a young researcher during Ed Stone's time
as director, and she was one of several speakers
who honored Ed.
It's a special moment for the Laboratory to
celebrate and commemorate the incredible life and legacy of Ed Stone with the
official unveiling of the Ed Stone Voyager exploration trail. So today we'll
get to travel a path similar to the twin Voyager spacecraft.
Don't worry, it is not billions of miles long.
And we'll get to experience the mission's exciting milestones, launch dates, encounters with the giant planets,
and transition to interstellar space.
And interspersed with the spacecraft's accomplishments, as it was in real life,
Ed's achievements are marked along the path
of the spacecraft.
Won't spoil them all for you,
I'm not gonna give you the full list,
and there are many,
but a few are being awarded the National Medal of Science,
receiving the Carl Sagan Memorial Award.
And we know one of Ed's proudest achievements,
having a middle school in his hometown of Burlington, Iowa, named in his honor.
So when I speak about JPL's storied history, I often talk about the pioneers who first
launched our great nation into space, from the JPL founders to the human computers who
calculated the early rocket and mission trajectories by hand.
Ed was also a pioneer whose achievements stand shoulder to shoulder with those earliest
JPLers. And speaking of shoulders, as a planetary scientist myself, I can definitely say that
we all stand on Ed's shoulders as we look to an exciting future in deep space exploration,
much of which, and this is really true, much of which was built on the extraordinary success and legacy of Voyager. It set the tone not only scientifically, but in terms of boldness
for so many of the deep space missions that we fly today. Over the course of his
career at Caltech and JPL, Ed did nothing short of transform humanity's
understanding of our solar system and beyond. He has the distinction of being
one of the few scientists to be involved with the mission that came closest to
the Sun, NASA's Parker Solar Probe, and the one that has traveled farthest from it,
Voyager. These missions and many others that Ed supported have literally
rewritten the textbooks and impacted people's view of themselves as travelers on the pale blue dot we call Earth.
In 1991, about two years after Voyager completed its incredible grand tour with a spectacular
visit to Neptune, and by the way Voyager 2 is still the only spacecraft to have visited Uranus and
Neptune, so after in 1991 Ed was named the seventh director of JPL. During his decade-long
tenure he oversaw more than two dozen successful missions and instruments, many of which represented
the next giant leaps for planetary science, for NASA's Earth observing system, and for
astrophysics. These included such missions as Mars Pathfinder with its memorable Mars
Rover Sojourner, the
first wheeled vehicle on another planet, and the foundation of today's extraordinary series
of Mars Rovers, also of course a co-star of the movie The Martian with Matt Damon. Also,
there was the prime mission of Galileo to Jupiter, first mission to orbit Jupiter, and
the development and launch of the collaborative NASA ESA Cassini-Huygens mission to Jupiter, first mission to orbit Jupiter, and the development and launch of
the collaborative NASA-ESA Cassini-Huygens mission to Saturn.
Both of these missions further explored the incredible scientific questions raised by
Voyager and paved the way for missions flying today, like our own Europa Clipper honored
over there on the big board, which is doing great by the way, Europa Clipper,
flying incredibly well. So, Ed was director at a time of change for NASA. Feels familiar.
He restructured several missions so they could fly under stringent cost constraints brought
on by NASA's focus on faster, better, cheaper development. Despite cuts to NASA's budget at the time, JPL reached its highest flight rate to date
during Ed's time as director.
He oversaw initiatives that reformed JPL's proposal process, flight project practices,
and design principles that enabled more missions to be formulated and flown while at the same
time improving quality.
He established the Groundbreaking Concurrent Engineering Group
or Team X as we call it,
to rapidly develop mission and spacecraft concepts
and cost them.
This is a vital capability to support the proposal process
and produce less expensive missions.
And that idea of Team X has now been duplicated
at almost every other NASA center
and lots of other organizations as well.
Speaking personally, I can very much relate to some of the challenges that Ed faced as
director during his time.
We underwent a significant downsizing of the laboratory, for example, and Ed even oversaw
a couple of very difficult mission failures, one of which I was a young team member on
actually standing right about there, live on CNN when
we did not successfully land on Mars, can very much relate to some of the challenges
that he faced during his tenure.
But through all of it, through the highs and the lows, he continued to serve as project
scientist for Voyager.
Fifty years.
And that, I believe, is an accomplishment we will never see again.
It is perhaps his crowning achievement
among so many monumental successes
that made up his life's work.
And the impact of Voyager is continuing.
I don't know if you all saw maybe three weeks ago
in the New York Times, they covered a new nature paper
led by JPLers, JPL scientists,
that reinterpreted Voyager's observations
of the unusually oblique and
off-centered magnetic field at Uranus.
So we flew by, we saw Uranus's magnetic field.
It's very weird, and that has been an open question since that time.
And this new paper reinterpreted it in the context of rare solar wind conditions that
were present right at the time of the flyby.
So 40 years later, we're still trying to understand what Voyager is teaching us about the outer solar system.
And we will seek to test those results as we did with Galileo and now Europa Clipper and then Cassini at Saturn.
The next big mission to the outer solar system will be at Uranus where we'll follow up on Voyager's very interesting
and strange observations.
The trail we're unveiling today will be a testament to his bold curiosity, his visionary
leadership and passion for science that enabled us to explore further into the cosmos than
ever before.
To follow in the footsteps of Ed Stone is to walk in the path of a giant.
We're thrilled to honor his legacy and impact today with the Ed Stone Voyager Exploration Trail.
Thank you again for being here and joining us
to honor his legacy.
Applause
Lori Leshyn, thank you so much.
You talked about Ed Stone as a pioneer,
but also as a mentor.
Yeah, Ed was an amazing leader in every aspect. He led
the laboratory with so much energy and vibrance, but he also mentored
individuals and helped them see their paths to the future. Just like the
incredible Voyager path through the solar system, he helped people see their
own path. It's been my honor to talk to, I think, five different JPL directors over the years.
I think every one of you has had big decisions to make and maybe terrible decisions to have to make
and you alluded to that as you were talking today and how Ed faced some of those same challenges.
It's part of the job sadly, isn't it? Well, Ed definitely led the lab in a time of great change.
A lot of NASA aficionados will remember the faster, better, cheaper era as a time of great upheaval,
but also a time of great innovation.
And when things are challenging, and we certainly have had a challenging year at JPL,
that's what I try to think about.
How do we actually leverage this moment to
think differently, to innovate, and to drive to a brighter future?
How does his example, and perhaps other directors as well, but specifically Ed,
does that play a part? Does it guide you to any degree in how you keep this place ticking?
I absolutely think about what would Ed Stone do? What would Charles Alachi do? I absolutely think about what would Ed Stone do, what would Charles Alachi do, I absolutely think about those things. It should be a little rubber bracelet. Yes, exactly.
And luckily I was able to consult with them, you know, with Ed during his life
and certainly with Charles and Mike as predecessors. We walk in great
footsteps here and they have a lot of knowledge and experience and also
wisdom so I always like to take advantage of that We could talk about all sorts of individual magic tricks underway here
But I can't let you go without getting a report on Europa Clipper
All going well, right? Europa Clipper is rocking it. They are doing great. The spacecraft is flying beautifully
Obviously, we've had we had it here for many years and then when you launch it you
still got to kind of learn how to fly it. It's been incredible. So we've done all of the major
deployments including the magnetometer boom and the radar antennas and just this week we moved
to reaction wheel control of the spacecraft which was really the last big event before our Mars fly
by on March 1st 2025. Be there. I can tell you now because by
the time people hear this I think it'll be public that we do our regular best of 2024 in space survey
of our members and people at large space fans at large and far and away number one in several
categories this year you got it Europa Clipper. Europa Clipper rocks I'm so proud of the team and you know I
think Ed Stone would have been thrilled with the science that we're going to get
really following up on those first Voyager flybys of Jupiter what an
incredible legacy it lives on. As we stand here people may be hearing a
forklift behind us getting ready for the next event here on this beautiful plaza. The Innovation Challenge. Yes. Can talk
about what that represents as part of JPL's role in the world. The Innovation
Challenge is all about bringing innovations forward from the next
generation and to me again that just perfectly reflects who we are as a
laboratory. We are proud of what
we've currently achieved, you know, launching Europa Clipper in 2024. Amazing. But we're
always looking to what's next. We always want to spark imaginations to come up with that
next innovation and we'll celebrate that today with the Innovation Challenge.
Laurie, I hope I get to see you before then, but I sure hope I'm around to help celebrate
the 50th anniversary of the two Voyagers in space.
It's not far off.
It's not.
It's less than three years away now, Voyagers at 50.
And I'll tell you, they're the little spacecraft that could, although not that little.
And you know, there's a challenge to fly them at this age.
It's non-trivial and the teams are working incredibly hard to make sure we've got two
great Voyager spacecraft at 50.
Thank you, Lori.
Thank you.
Current JPL Director Lori Leshin.
Also saluting Ed Stone that day was JPL Director Emeritus Charles Alachi.
He took over running the lab after Ed left the job.
I asked Charles about the difficult times JPL has gone through repeatedly over its long history.
That's normal that you go through a tough period and sometimes you go through a great period
because when you do exploration it's tough technically, it's tough communicating it to
the public, it's tough convincing people in Washington to do these things because you know
the funding organization, I mean NASA and Congress, they have so many different priorities and you have to come
and show them you know the critical importance of discovery and exploration. You know the
founder of the Planetary Society was a superb example of that. Carl Sagan and Bruce Murray
were superb examples of trying to convince the public Congress
that exploration should be a high priority for our country. I know JPL is
going through some tough time today but I'm sure it will be overcome you know
over the years. I've seen it I worked at JPL for 50 years almost all my career so
I've seen things going up and down over this period and the critical thing is to keep being positive and proactive even in tough times and keep
a smile all the time you know about it and I'm sure things will work well
because fundamentally the public does support exploration and Congress does
support exploration but you have to keep communicating it regularly. We'll keep trying to do our part at the Planetary Society. Thank you, Charles.
Thank you very much and thank you for all what you do.
I could have gone up to almost anyone at the dedication ceremony and known I was about to
talk with someone who had made invaluable contributions to robotic and other exploration of the solar system and the cosmos beyond.
As you'll hear, I had a special reason for asking retired engineer and project manager
Glenn Cunningham if I could spend a few minutes with him.
For a long time I've been here at the laboratory.
I had many jobs starting in the Voyager project as a system engineer and then team chief for
the Voyager spacecraft team between the flights from launch to the two Jupiter encounters.
Then I kind of moved into the Mars missions for a long time.
I was the deputy project manager of Mars Observer for a while, and then the project manager.
Then I was the project manager of Mars Global Surveyor.
And after that I worked in the directorate that managed the Mars missions
as deputy director of the Mars projects.
They kept you busy.
Very busy. A really varied career which was fabulous. And during a lot of that time you were working with
and under the leadership of the man that we are honoring today,
Ed Stone. Did you cross paths a lot?
Frequently, early on when he was the
project scientist for Voyager I was just a lowly system engineer
and I would admire him in meetings.
We didn't interact very often.
When I got to be in the flight operations,
we interacted frequently because we had
to keep the spacecraft operating so well
so that his science teams could be making all
of the wonderful discoveries they made.
Then when I was in the Mars missions
and doing the project management jobs, and Ed was the director of the laboratory at that time
we interacted a lot especially on the Mars server project which came to a kind
of bad demise. We didn't quite make it to Mars, but there was a big press event, many press events,
as we tried to restore the spacecraft operation.
And Ed always led ahead of us.
It was so wonderful.
We would work very hard here.
The press would be knocking at the door, wanting to know what was going on all the time. Ed always took the ball and led us and spoke to the press
and was reassuring to the public and it was just a great interaction.
I really appreciated the pad that he gave us.
He was an excellent leader from the standpoint that he lets you do the work.
He wasn't a guy that told you what to do every day. He couldn't ask for better leadership.
One of the reasons I wanted to talk to you in particular is just the selfish self-interest
of the Planetary Society because you did and do so much for us.
I mean, among other things, I saw you listed as project manager for that wonderful old
project we did, Red Rover Goes to Mars, aimed at young people, which was just a terrific
success.
And it was a really fun and challenging opportunity to bring Mars operations, Mars spacecraft
science stuff, to kids around the world. And we had the contest to select members from around the world to come and participate.
And we ended up having several kids participate with the missions, with the 98 missions.
It was really a very challenging and enjoyable time.
I'm glad you feel that way about it. We look back on it very fondly. And thank you very much for what you've done for the Society, but also for JPL and for all of the missions that you've worked
on and for joining us for a couple of minutes. Thank you very much, Matt. It's a pleasure to do
that. We'll be right back after this short break.
I'm Jack Corelli, Director of Government Relations for the Planetary Society.
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Ed Stone was also a devoted father and husband,
as we heard from his daughter, Janet Stone.
Here's a brief portion of what she shared with Ed's friends.
Dad would love simply the fact that the walkway is here,
where many of the thousands of Voyager family members have lived, because he
would have been the first to acknowledge the success of this whole vast and
talented team. And he would love that it can continue to be added to, just like
humankind's knowledge, just like humankind's understanding, and just like humankind's knowledge, just like humankind's understanding,
and just like humankind's story in the cosmos.
On behalf of the Stone families and on behalf of Dad,
thank you for this extraordinary installation.
Dad would express out loud wonder at the ideas it acknowledges and the ideas it
will spark and quietly and privately it would touch his heart. A perfect celebration. Cheers
to all of you for it. Janet Stone and her family also had a very special gift
they presented to JPL.
For many years, Ed had proudly displayed in his home
an original flight spare of the cover
for the famed golden record, the magnificent collection
of images, voices, and music that even now heads further
into interstellar space aboard the twin Voyager spacecraft. I asked Janet and her sister Susan about this gift and more
when they joined me after the ceremony. Hearing all these other people sharing
our admiration, it touches our hearts because it's dad. It also touches our
minds. There is so much learning and so much passion for continued exploration of all kinds,
not just space here, that it's a very inspiring place to be and very inspiring people to hear from.
I'm not sure that I could have parted with that lovely gift that you gave to JPL or returned to JPL that flight spare of the beautiful cover
of the Voyager Golden Record. Was it at all hard to part with? I mean that's a
lovely thought. It meant a lot to him and it means a lot to our family. We always
knew that when when our parents passed it would go to a public home of some type because it's just too important,
a space history memorabilia item,
and to have it come back to JPL just seems very fitting.
This is only the latest of many honors
that your father has received over the years.
I loved when Linda Spilker said,
he's still very much a part
of the Voyager mission. Basically his fingerprints are all over those
interstellar travelers. So dad's fingerprints so to speak are not only
all over Voyager but they're also all over many scientific endeavors not just
space exploration but through a lot of different disciplines. People who grew up
listening to the Voyager news conferences and that sort of thing were inspired to pursue science
of any kind, not just space science. So anything from research into messenger RNA to the Voyager
spacecraft, there's a little bit of Ed Stone in a lot of that.
I think one of the things that has become more evident to me through the process of celebrating his life
is all of the things that he did touch, and it wasn't really even just a touch.
It was like a firm grab and a big contribution.
He provided a foundation of a lot of things like the telescopes and Voyager and JPL and
space exploration.
And it's been very humbling to see the great impact he had.
It was finally time to hit the trail.
And who could have been better trail mates than the current
leaders of the Voyager Interstellar mission? You'll hear us enjoy just a few of the many plaques
embedded in the Ed Stone Voyager Trail that turn it into a timeline of the mission's stellar
accomplishments, along with other milestones in Ed's long career. Ed and I first met in 1977 when I began working on Voyager right out of college.
I remember watching in awe as Ed skillfully ran the Voyager team meetings and organized
the press conferences.
He coordinated the science activities and each of the six Voyager flybys. Ed was always patient and calm
as he led the science discussions,
and sometimes they got quite contentious.
He asked penetrating questions,
weighed the science justification,
and then made very thoughtful decisions.
Observing Ed's unique leadership skills for 12 years
through the four planetary flybys
was like watching an accomplished conductor lead an orchestra of scientists as they composed a new symphony of discovery
for each of the planets that Voyager visited.
Each flyby has its unique plaque along the Voyager Trail. Going to close out today talking to two of the people, maybe the two people,
who are still most involved and most responsible for the Voyager Interstellar mission.
We have talked many times before. Linda Spilker, project scientist, Suzy Dodd, project manager.
Welcome to both of you.
It's a
pleasure to be here Matt, thank you. Yeah thank you very much I'm glad you can
make this event. Let's walk. Tell me about this very well it's not the first stop
but it's the first one we're looking at. It means a lot to us at the Planetary
Society as well as I'm sure to the two of you. This plaque commemorates the
pictures that Voyager One took for the family portrait of the solar system on Valentine's Day in 1990.
And in particular that very special picture of the pale blue dot, which was Earth captured in a sunbeam.
And it really provided perspective of just how tiny our very precious world is. Susie, that's, I don't know how much you were involved, but I know that was a big deal,
right?
Getting the spacecraft turned around to look back toward the sun.
It was a big deal.
It took a lot of negotiations, I think, with NASA.
A great idea that has served over time and is certainly what people think about when
they think about Voyager.
They think of that pale blue dot picture and puts the perspective of how big space is and how small
we really are in the universe.
Well, I think about a lot more than the pale blue dot, but it's right up there near the
top of the list, if not at the top. What do we got here, Linda?
This is Pathfinder and Sojourner land on Mars and this was during the time that Ed Stone was director of JPL so this happened in 1997 so it's
commemorating events that happened during his tenure as director and for
the pale blue dot image I would add that Carl Sagan was really instrumental in
helping convince NASA that it was worth doing spending the resources to turn
Voyager 1 back and take
these images before the cameras were turned off.
We're about to walk over Sojourner and Pathfinder.
Sorry guys.
And I think back, I mean that was during the, I always get them in the wrong order, the
faster, better, cheaper era, which was, I guess it was a real challenge, right?
It was, it was.
It was a new era where NASA was trying to balance the costs of the mission and the schedule as well.
This plaque is a really a nice one for Voyager 1.
Oh, I forgot we didn't talk about this one.
This next plaque commemorates when Voyager 1 passed the distance of Pioneer 10,
when it had stopped operating and became the furthest human-made object in the solar system.
And there is Pioneer 10 shown on this plaque along with Voyagers 1 and 2.
Alright let's walk a little bit further.
We heard several times today about Ed Stone being a very fast walker, probably much faster
than the pace that we're taking along this path that honors him.
Did either of you do any of those walks? Well it was hard to keep up with them, yes. He
was very good at it. I remember a cartoon that someone drew on Voyager. It was a
cartoon of Ed Stone and he had on this hat with wings. It showed that the wing
sort of lifted him off the ground and he could go very very quickly. A man with a purpose. We'll probably
stop here but the path actually two paths following roughly Voyager 1 and Voyager 2's path
through the solar system. Tell us about this one Susan. Well this plaque was is here where Voyager
1 crossed the termination shock and the termination shock is where the particles
from the sun go from supersonic to subsonic.
What it tells you is that you're getting close, okay?
We're getting close to crossing the heliopause
and getting close to getting into interstellar space.
Even though when you look down the road,
you won't see the other plaque yet,
because it took several more years from the termination shock crossing to get down into interstellar space.
But this is what really got, you know, wet people's whistle, right?
Got people really excited that we were getting close to crossing into interstellar space
with the Voyager spacecraft.
Right.
It took actually 23 years past the Neptune flyby before in 2012 Voyager 1
crossed the heliopause. We didn't know where the heliopause was. There were so
many models, so many theories, and every time we crossed a model's distant point
they had re-evaluated and said, oh no, we've added another five or ten AU to our
number. So I kept getting further and further away, but we didn't know until we
crossed it.
And the two Voyager spacecraft. They've certainly had their challenges lately,
but I'm thinking of how they are still delivering great science. This recent Uranus story, as we
speak, it was only what a couple of weeks ago, I think the announcement came out, based on Voyager
data. And it's told us very important unsuspected stuff about
Uranus.
Right, it turns out that some scientists here at JPL looked once again at the Voyager Uranus
data.
The magnetosphere was highly compressed and very unusual because all of the plasma was
gone.
They didn't see any plasma and so they looked more carefully and realized if they could track it back to what was happening on the Sun a huge solar event had compressed the Uranus
magnetosphere. Very unusual happens only about 4% of the time. That allowed all
the plasma to flow out the tail. It also populated the radiation belt so they
look stronger than usual. And what's really significant is we now think there
could be plasma in the
Uranian magnetosphere and if that plasma is there it might point to possible ocean worlds.
Oh my. Moons with global oceans beneath them. Some of Voyager's images of the moon Ariel
are especially tantalizing, so reminiscent of what we've seen on other ocean worlds.
Water water everywhere, It just keeps going.
Suzy, about those challenges, how's the health of the spacecraft?
Well, today they're both very healthy.
What we like to say, anomaly free today, but there's many challenges.
They are the senior citizens of spacecraft and have far outlived their original four-year design.
Honestly, it's remarkable that both two spacecraft,
and they're both operating after 47 years,
we have to manage the power very carefully
because our power from our radioisotope thermal electric generators,
the nuclear power source, is degrading.
Also, it's very cold in space,
and so we're finding some issues
thermally that we also have to manage. So it's a challenge to keep them both healthy, but
to date we've been able to do it and we're focused on continuing to do that to get these
spacecraft out to 50 years so we can have a much bigger party than we did today.
I really look forward to that. I told Lori Lesh and I sure hope I'm around to help you celebrate the 50th. As we celebrated the 45th not too
long ago, Linda I also said to Lori Ed Stone's fingerprints and much more are
still very much a part of this mission. That's right. In fact for me Ed Stone's
fingerprints are on both Voyager spacecraft, you know, with his keen
intellect and just his devotion to Voyager.
Part of Ed lives on in those two Voyager spacecraft.
Thank you both for walking this tiny portion of this brand new path or paths at JPL.
I hope that more people will have a chance to do these, at least during the JPL open
houses.
And I can't wait to talk to the two of you again the next time we
need an update on the Voyager Interstellar mission.
Great. Thank you very much, Matt.
Thanks, Matt. It's been a pleasure.
Voyager Project Manager Susie Dodd, who is also Director for the Interplanetary Network Directorate at JPL, and Voyager Project
Scientist Linda Spilker.
I'll close with this bit of tourist advice.
Don't miss the chance to visit the Jet Propulsion Lab for either a group tour with 20 or more
of your friends or classmates, or for one of the Lab's immensely popular visitor days.
And when you do, be sure to follow in the rapid footsteps
of Dr. Edward Stone.
For Planetary Radio, I'm Matt Kaplan
of the Planetary Society.
Thank you, Matt.
I am so relieved that the Ed Stone Voyager Trail
and the rest of the lab suffered no fire damage.
As we mentioned earlier in the show,
more than 200 members of the JPL team
tragically lost their homes in the Eaton fire.
Our hearts go out to them and everyone else
who suffered in the aftermath
of these devastating fires in LA.
We dedicate this week's episode to them.
I'll provide resources on this episode's
planetary radio webpage so you can find ways
to help support the fantastic workers of JPL and Caltech.
And if you'd like to honor Ed Stone in person by walking his new trail, we'll also share
the link for information on public tours of JPL.
Now let's check in with Dr. Bruce Betts, our chief scientist for What's Up.
Hey, Bruce.
Hi, Sarah.
How are you doing?
Doing all right.
So this week we got to listen to Matt's grand adventure to go to JPL to talk about Ed Stone
and his legacy and the dedication of this memorial trail for both Ed Stone and Voyager.
And during the conversation, they got to bring up one of the most important things that Voyager
did, which is this grand tour of the solar system.
Road trip.
Road trip. I mean, it's kind of like the biggest planetary road trip that's ever existed, at
least as far as we know as humans.
Yes. Wow. Profound caveat I'm going to move past.
I've been asked in the past a few connected questions, right? One, how is it that Voyager is the only spacecraft that's managed to go to Neptune and Uranus?
So there's that right off the bat.
And also, how did it manage to go to so many planets with only two spacecraft?
What happened here that allowed Voyager to actually accomplish this?
Luck, man.
They sent it to Jupiter.
It's like, I think we can get to Saturn.
I think we can get to that is so not true.
It was the development of the so-called Grand Tour, basically, once every, I think, 175
years, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune line up, so to speak.
They're not lined up, but they're such that if you get a gravity assist from Jupiter,
you can head to Saturn.
Saturn, you can head to Uranus from Uranus to Neptune.
So each of them bends your trajectory and imparts more energy and gets you there faster, despite the fact that it took 12 years to get to Neptune.
So this is something that was recognized, I believe you told me, by a Caltech grad student, CoCaltech,
and then was developed later. So it's interesting though, being the government and funded by the
government, they wouldn't commit to Uranus and Neptune. So when they were launched, they were
Jupiter and Saturn. And then, you know, it was spectacular, so they got funded to go out and do Uranus and Neptune.
They made the choice with Voyager 1. They wanted to check out Titan because it's freaky interesting,
not really knowing at the time that they would only be able to see an orange ball of haze.
And to do Titan, this is more than you ask for as usual, do Titan that took them on a trajectory that they couldn't go to Uranus with Voyager
one which they
They knew but they had Voyager 2 so Voyager 2 was put on the grand tour trajectory to do Uranus and Neptune
Basically, let's keep track of Uranus and Neptune are way the heck out there. So it's very
challenging to go out there as is Pluto of of course, even farther out most of the time.
And so being able to get the gravity assist from the giant planets, you get out there and you get
out there more efficiently. And it was just super cool. I mean, there was our reconnaissance,
our only reconnaissance of Uranus and Neptune and our, not our first reconnaissance of Jupiter,
Saturn, but our first serious,
nice instruments, pretty pictures, views of it.
It's so cool. And I'm now thinking about the fact that they decided to go to Titan with
Voyager 1 instead of going out to those other worlds. Like, I'm really glad that they recognize
that Titan was such an interesting world, but kind of tragic that all they could see was the haze, right? We could have gotten two flybys of Neptune and Uranus.
Yeah, no, there's, I agree with you, but there's also another trade-off, which is by doing that,
they then use Saturn's gravity to send them up out of the plane of the planets, out of the ecliptic plane where all the planets
are basically revolving around the Sun.
And so therefore, they have been able to sample, especially when they get out to the edge of
the heliosphere, the magnetic field in the interstellar space, you've got Voyager 1 and
Voyager 2 doing it at two very different parts of the heliosphere.
So there's also for those who party with particles and fields and love such
quirky things that also is an advantage that way.
It's funny that they wouldn't even commit to Neptune and Uranus and now thinking about it all these years later.
What an asset to have those in different locations so we can actually measure all the particles going on in interstellar space at different
locations relative to the Sun.
That's a whole knock-on that they really not plan. And one more reason why the Voyager
spacecraft are still just, I don't know. They're amazing. I don't know if I can ever think of them
as not my favorite spacecrafts because the images that came out of that mission really,
really impacted me and everybody else and to this day it's Still still all we have of Uranus and Neptune apart from our long-range
Observations with telescopes right which just got a lot better with JWST, but still
Again, they're really far out there Neptune 30 times the Sun-Earth distance
It it's way out there. I don't know that I mentioned that. So anyway,
I do want to say Ed Stone was amazing in his voyage role, director of observatories,
Caltech professor, and he has a wonderful family as well. So he has missed and apparently the
entire world has said that already. So I'm not new, but I wanted to add that.
Apparently the entire world has said that already. So I'm not new, but I wanted to add that.
I'll also link on this episode page
to our previous episode where we had some people
send in their beautiful audio messages
about what Ed Stone meant to them.
Because clearly he not only had a huge impact
on the space community, but on the people in his lives.
So I'll share that as well so we can all pay tribute to him
and all the wonderful work that people at JPL did.
Nice.
All right.
Ready to move on to some, uh, ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo Speaking of mistakes, I wanted to talk about the Buran Soviet shuttle and note that many
things about it, but mostly that it only flew one mission and it was without humans on board.
But also there are a lot of other interesting things.
Flew once in 88 and then with the Soviet Union collapsing in the following years and money
going away, it did not fly again. But it looks like the US space shuttle.
And apparently, not surprisingly,
that's not coincidental since it was one of the first real
examples of using the internet for espionage.
Really?
There was a lot of unclassified documents online
and they could be accessed that the KGB assembled
all sorts of information. Apparently, I mean, it's what I've read and that's why it looks
almost identical. I mean, they use tiles. It's very, very, very similar. They did have
their successful autonomously controlled mission, or at least it went up, it went down, it survived.
But it's just a weird story. And then it was in a some type of hangar or building in Kazakhstan,
which collapsed in 2002, I think. So it's under rubble and debris in Kazakhstan.
That's tragic. Someone needs to unearth that and put it inside a museum or something.
Thanks, Cindy. That belongs in a museum. I mean, it does, though. Oh, man. And, you know, NASA not knowing that you've got to
secure your files in the early age of the internet. Man, we've come a long way.
Now I'm constantly reporting phishing emails.
we've come a long way. Now I'm constantly reporting fishing emails.
Okay, Sarah, I want you to go out there, look up the night sky and think happy thoughts with smiley faces and flowers and party poppers everywhere. Thank you.
Good night.
We've reached the end of this week's episode of Planetary Radio, but we'll be back next
week with a surprising look at new modeling on the formation of Pluto's largest moon,
Charon, or Karen, depending on how you like to pronounce it.
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And until next week, ad astra.