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Comments
MrZorg58 t1_j8z7h9h wrote
Forgot about stardust mission. Spot on.
VitaminPb t1_j8yzlbn wrote
Voyager will return in a few hundred years going by the name V’ger.
[deleted] t1_j8z1a60 wrote
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Strange_Flatworm1144 t1_j8z2wm9 wrote
Unfortunately Voyager 6 hasn't been launched. Or fortunately, depending if you want V'ger to turn up or not.
TexasTokyo t1_j8z4oa9 wrote
One sec…have to go retcon that.
Stinkwood t1_j8yv418 wrote
A generous interpretation of your question might be the Apollo 12 3rd stage which orbited the sun for a bit before coming back to orbit the earth. This was all by accident though 😂
Tileren t1_j8yr8ri wrote
My guess would be Hayabusa II (sp?). Although the only part to return to terra firma was the sample container.
Warrior_and_reader t1_j8yt9ug wrote
That and soon OSIRIS-REx’s sample from Bennu (though that won’t land for a few months). I don’t know which was further.
Tileren t1_j8ytv9i wrote
True. I don't know which is further either, although I should. I spent an entire summer mapping rocks on Bennu as part of CosmoQuest's citizen science team.
internetboyfriend666 t1_j8yxkxq wrote
Either Hayabusa or Stardust. Hayabusa collected samples of asteroid 25143 Itokawa from beyond the orbit of Mars and returned to Earth. Stardust collected samples from comet 81P/Wild, also beyond the orbit of Mars, and returned a capsule to Earth. I can't find the exact distances but it's one of those 2.
hikekorea t1_j8yqexy wrote
I feel like Apollo 13 has a fair shot since it was the furthest manned mission. But no idea about probes that have been further than the moon and returned.
My_Soul_to_Squeeze t1_j8z519y wrote
Hopefully a record that will fall in the next few years.
nicathor t1_j8yr6w4 wrote
Not sure, but if you can track down that giant infographic of every probe ever launched it shows all their courses and should probably be easy to identify all with return trips
[deleted] t1_j8z33t0 wrote
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[deleted] t1_j8yvqlf wrote
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MrZorg58 t1_j8z7f4b wrote
Depends on the meaning of returned. If passing near earth counts, then I would think it would be Cassini.
If the meaning is come back to earth's surface, that would be the Apollo missions. Manned mission that is LOL
SpartanJack17 t1_j8z8q3i wrote
Hello u/MBen7, your submission "Which spacecraft has travelled farthest from Earth and retuned?" has been removed from r/space because:
- Such questions should be asked in the "All space questions" thread stickied at the top of the sub.
Please read the rules in the sidebar and check r/space for duplicate submissions before posting. If you have any questions about this removal please message the r/space moderators. Thank you.
UAPLMH t1_j8yucul wrote
The SS Hillencotter has gone to other star systems , for one.
Mauricioduarte t1_j8yr5qx wrote
The Orion capsule from Artemis 1 a few months ago
The stardust spacecraft travelled farther, but only a return capsule came back.