Posted on 07/03/2008 6:20:41 AM PDT by Abathar
Hurtling through space 31 years after its launch, the Voyager 2 spacecraft has sent back the most detailed view yet of the shock wave that marks the thinning of the solar wind, the charged particles streaming from the sun.
Researchers say the crossing confirms that the heliospherethe region swept out by the solar windis actually lopsided, perhaps due to a tilted magnetic field in local interstellar space.
The shock wave, or heliospheric termination shock, occurs when the supersonic wind thins to the point that it can no longer rebuff the denser haze of charged particles flowing through interstellar space. Instead, the solar wind suddenly collapses in on itself.
Researchers say the phenomenon is sort of like the edge of a stream of tap water after it hits the sink [see image]. Solar wind is swept along by the sun's magnetic field, which means it cascades like a fluid instead of crashing like billiard balls.
Data from Voyager 2, described in a series of papers today in Nature, show that the craft entered the termination shock on August 31, 2007, at a distance from the sun of about eight billion miles (13 billion kilometers) and crossed it the next day.
That's 10 percent closer to the sun than when the craft's sister ship, Voyager 1, passed through the same shock wave in late 2004 heading outbound from the solar system in a different direction.
That far from the sun, the density of solar wind is, at most, a couple of protons and electrons per gallon, astrophysicist J.R. Jokipii of the University of Arizona Lunar and Planetary Laboratory in Tucson says. "It's almost impossible to measure. You have to give it to these experimenters," he says.
Voyager 2 will now follow its twin into the heliosheath, the region of slower-moving wind beyond the termination shock.
Besides confirming earlier research that hinted at the lopsided heliosphere, the crossing provides new details, including the energy and speed of the solar wind, that Voyager 1 could not pick up because its plasma detection instrument had stopped functioning.
According to the new data, the wind downstream of the shock was cooler and faster moving than researchers had anticipated. The interpretation, says Jokippi, who wrote an editorial accompanying the Nature reports, is that the solar wind is imparting energy to neutral atoms from the interstellar gas and causing them to ionize.
These "pickup" ions are then accelerated to speeds of hundreds of miles (kilometers) per second, exerting a strong effect on the structure of the shock, he says.
The twin Voyager craft set out for deep space in 1977 to study Jupiter and Saturn, but after their primary mission was completed, they kept on going. In 10 to 20 years after reaching the termination shock, NASA expects the craft to cross the heliopause, the outer edge of the heliosheath.
That would mean they have exited the solar system and entered the interstellar medium. NASA engineers estimate that both probes' plutonium power packs have the potential to keep them broadcasting data until 2025.
If we're lucky, Jokippi says, they'll let us know what they find.
KITCHEN SINK HELIOSPHERE: If the solar wind is like a stream of water spreading out on a flat sink bottom, then the boundary where the flow breaks against onrushing soapy water (interstellar gas) is the termination shock (recently encountered by the spacecraft Voyager 2) and the region of slower-moving water beyond it is the heliosheath. Courtesy of J.R. Jokipii
that is amazing!
thanks.
The little guys just keep chugging along don’t they?
Ping!
Must have a Slant 6 engine in those buggers.
Like Timex watches - They take a licking and keep on ticking.
Amazing that far out, we can still pickup on the craft’s radio transmission.
To bad the engineers didn’t quit NASA and work for GM...
Something tells me Voyager will be back.............it will have this really great female body and no hair...
Yep, calls itself “Veejer” though so we will be confused.
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A feature NASA can no longer design into a space probe because it might crash on launch and scatter chunks of plutonium everywhere. Even though the one on the Apollo 13 lunar ascent module crashed into the Indian Ocean at 26,000 MPH with nary a trace of radioactive release.
LOL, Star Trek had some great lines: Such as: "Why does God need a star ship"?
Worst Star Trek movie ever. Probably best choice for bald actress ever.
-PJ
Uhmmm...no?
BTTT!
Well, I think it is a wind, but I believe that it is more shaped by the gravi-magnetic forces than by the particle stream itself. What direction, with respect to the solar system's travel direction in the cosmos, were the Voyager craft sent; the boundary distance will change and be further away the further from the dead-ahead position they travel.
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