From the first footprints to interstellar space. A narrated cinematic fly-through — sit back as the camera flies the route and the story unfolds.
Every story starts here — a single blue world, the only home our species has ever known.
1969: we reached the nearest world and left footprints that will outlast every city on Earth.
Then we sent our robots to Mars — wheels turning in red dust, scouting the ground for the first human bootprints to come.
Farther still: the king of planets, where our probes braved a radiation storm to weigh a world 318 times Earth’s mass.
Cassini circled the ringed giant for 13 years before its final plunge — humanity living, for a while, a billion kilometres from home.
And one machine kept going — past every planet, out of the Sun’s embrace entirely. Voyager 1 is now in interstellar space, the farthest we have ever reached, still whispering home.