A series of plaques stretching through the heart of the agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory offers highlights of the space explorer's career and the Voyager mission he led.
Family members, colleagues, and local dignitaries gathered on Friday, Dec. 6, at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California for the unveiling of a memorial honoring Ed Stone, best known as the longtime project scientist of the agency's Voyager mission. Stone died in June 2024 at age 88 after leading the mission for half a century and leading JPL for a decade.
Stretching through the heart of the lab, the Dr. Edward Stone Exploration Trail traces the arc of Stone's distinguished career and the long journeys of the twin Voyager space probes. Designed with simple line drawings, 24 disc-shaped plaques along the trail offer career and mission highlights while evoking the Golden Record aboard both spacecraft.
Launched in the summer of 1977, Voyager 1 and 2 have since traveled more than 15.4 billion and 12.9 billion miles (24 billion and 20 billion kilometers), respectively - farther than any other human-made object. The plaques trace their trajectories to Jupiter and Saturn as well as their diverging paths, with Voyager 2 heading toward Uranus and Neptune as Voyager 1 made a beeline for interstellar space. Other stops along the trail honor Stone's work creating the W.M. Keck Observatory in 1985, his appointment as JPL's director in 1991, and his being honored with the Distinguished Service Award 2013.