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Eight billion miles away, Voyager exits Solar System
The Independent (U.K.) ^ | 11/06/03 | Steve Connor

Posted on 11/05/2003 1:38:05 PM PST by Pokey78

It was launched in the year in which Elvis died of a heart attack, Donna Summer hit number one with "I Feel Love" and a punk band called the Sex Pistols were taking Britain by storm.

Since 1977, the Voyager 1 space probe has witnessed at close quarters the violent "red spot" of Jupiter, a permanent storm on the planet's equator, and taken stunning photographs of its four biggest moons.

In 1980, a year after passing Jupiter, Voyager 1 made a dramatic fly-by of Titan, the largest of the 31 known moons of Saturn, and in 1991 its camera pointed briefly back towards Earth to capture an historic photograph of nearly allof the Solar System's nine planets.

In February 1998, Voyager 1 overtook the Pioneer 10 probe, launched in 1972, to become the most distant man-made object in space.

Now scientists are wondering if it has broken the ultimate record of space endurance by becoming the first probe to reach the outermost boundary of the Solar System.

Stamatios Krimigis of Johns Hopkins University in Laurel, Maryland, says the latest data from Voyager 1's enfeebled instruments suggests the probe has left the Solar System for the icy depths of interstellar space.

In a study published today in the journal Nature, Dr Krimigis and his colleagues argue that Voyager 1, which is now more than 8 billion miles from Earth, is going where no space probe has gone before.

The edge of the Solar System is defined as the point at which the high-velocity solar wind - a stream of charged particles from the Sun travelling at up to 467 miles per second - finally peters out to be replaced by the interstellar winds of deep space.

Scientists call this boundary the "termination shock" because the sudden drop in velocity of the solar wind from supersonic to subsonic speeds causes a transition similar to the sonic boom caused as an aircraft travels faster than the speed of sound.

The instrument on board Voyager 1 that could measure the speed of the solar wind directly has long since broken down, but scientists have invented an ingenious alternative based on the study of lower-energy particles.

Dr Krimigis and his team have interpreted their analysis as confirmation that Voyager 1 has finally begun the transition into interstellar space, but other scientists, led by Frank McDonald of the University of Maryland, believe that the probe has yet to reach the transition boundary.

To complicate matters further, the scientists accept that the edge of the Solar System is a moveable feast, with the termination shock boundary rapidly pulsating.

Dr Krimigis said that although he believed Voyager 1 passed through the boundary, it only did so for about 200 days before the boundary rebounded and enveloped the probe once more with a supersonic solar wind.

Len Fisk, an astronomer and commentator at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, said that the argument over whether Voyager 1 had gone through the boundary was important because the termination shock was a fascinating astrophysical object that had never been properly studied.

"I tend to agree with Krimigis et al that their data can most readily be explained if the termination shock had been crossed," Dr Fisk said. "And once the termination shock has definitely been passed, the adventure enters a new phase."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: voyager
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To: kanawa
Ah, either that's a mosaic picture of the Solar System, or you took rudypoot's beer cure and tried to lay some cheap tile flooring. :)
61 posted on 11/05/2003 4:33:07 PM PST by Heatseeker
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To: Pokey78
Voyager 1 must have a Hemi
62 posted on 11/05/2003 5:46:29 PM PST by South Dakota (Just so you know, I'm saddened that daschle and McGovern are from my state)
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To: Pokey78
Space is lonely, vast and deep, and you have promises to keep, and billions and billions of miles to go before you sleep.
63 posted on 11/05/2003 9:05:55 PM PST by Doctor Stochastic (Vegetabilisch = chaotisch is der Charakter der Modernen. - Friedrich Schlegel)
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To: RightWhale
Right. What's wrong with the article?

The use of "supersonic" and "subsonic" to describe the velocity of charged solar particles. There's nothing 'sonic' about the particles.

64 posted on 11/06/2003 8:21:00 AM PST by jae471
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To: jae471
"The use of "supersonic" and "subsonic" to describe the velocity of charged solar particles. There's nothing 'sonic' about the particles."

If a particle crosses the sound barrier and no one is there to hear it, did it really happen?
65 posted on 11/06/2003 8:38:58 AM PST by Rebelbase
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To: jae471
Sure. Space has temperature, too.
66 posted on 11/06/2003 9:01:33 AM PST by RightWhale (Close your tag lines)
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To: kanawa
Thanks
67 posted on 11/06/2003 9:22:39 AM PST by cruiserman
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To: ElkGroveDan
One thing Voyager did have on it was a recording of pictures and music. The music includes classical pieces by Bach, Mozart, Stravinsky, and Beethoven, as well as folk music from Sengal, Zaire, Mexico, and other cultures. As for the aliens nuking us, there is also Chuck Berry's "Johnny Be Goode", and Blind Willie Johnson's "Dark is the Night", so they might just decide we would be fun to watch.

Good thing rap hadn't gotten started by the time they launched this bird!

68 posted on 11/06/2003 9:29:15 AM PST by hunter112
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To: hunter112
Yeah, but it also had a lot of PC stuff, like a courtship chant from a Pygmy girl (I'm not kidding).
69 posted on 11/06/2003 9:31:05 AM PST by ElkGroveDan (Fighting for Freedom and Having Fun)
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To: ctonious
Ahhh - another Hitchhiker's Guide fan. Voyager skedaddles outta Dodge before the Vogon Hyperspace Bypass Project demolishes Earth and the rest of the Solar System.

There are more of us than you think, though the books are dangerous reading when out in public, laughing hysterically to yourself on the bus can earn some strange looks.

70 posted on 11/06/2003 9:38:33 AM PST by battousai (Coming Soon to an election near you: Pasty White Hillary and the Nine Dwarves!)
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To: Pokey78
Eight billion miles.....

Is the Solar System flat, or round, or oval shaped? Was 8 billion miles the shortest route?

71 posted on 11/06/2003 9:45:08 AM PST by Consort
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To: ElkGroveDan
Yeah, but it also had a lot of PC stuff, like a courtship chant from a Pygmy girl

Oh, well, I would have expected it to contain more than just Western-tradition music, they did a fair job sampling music from around the world. I'm one of those people who believes that sharing music makes us stronger as a human race.

Besides, the courtship chant from the Pygmy girl could come in handy for any aliens who want to get a little...

72 posted on 11/06/2003 9:41:01 PM PST by hunter112
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To: Pokey78; RhoTheta
I told my wife last night that Voyager had left the solar system. She said, "Wow! Where'd it go?"

Took me awhile to stop laughing.

73 posted on 11/12/2003 7:31:16 AM PST by Egon (I have come to no official decision regarding a run for office in 2008.)
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