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Author Topic:   Voyager Enters Solar System's Final Frontier
Robert Pearlman
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Posts: 12300
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted May 24, 2005 02:28 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft has entered the solar system's final frontier. It is entering a vast, turbulent expanse, where the sun's influence ends and the solar wind crashes into the thin gas between stars.

"Voyager 1 has entered the final lap on its race to the edge of interstellar space," said Dr. Edward Stone, Voyager project scientist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. Caltech manages NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, which built and operates Voyager 1 and its twin, Voyager 2.

In November 2003, the Voyager team announced it was seeing events unlike any in the mission's then 26-year history. The team believed the unusual events indicated Voyager 1 was approaching a strange region of space, likely the beginning of this new frontier called the termination shock region. There was considerable controversy over whether Voyager 1 had indeed encountered the termination shock or was just getting close.

The termination shock is where the solar wind, a thin stream of electrically charged gas blowing continuously outward from the sun, is slowed by pressure from gas between the stars. At the termination shock, the solar wind slows abruptly from a speed that ranges from 700,000 to 1.5 million mph and becomes denser and hotter. The consensus of the team is Voyager 1, at approximately 8.7 billion miles from the sun, has at last entered the heliosheath, the region beyond the termination shock.

Predicting the location of the termination shock was hard, because the precise conditions in interstellar space are unknown. Also, changes in the speed and pressure of the solar wind cause the termination shock to expand, contract and ripple.

The most persuasive evidence that Voyager 1 crossed the termination shock is its measurement of a sudden increase in the strength of the magnetic field carried by the solar wind, combined with an inferred decrease in its speed. This happens whenever the solar wind slows down.

In December 2004, the Voyager 1 dual magnetometers observed the magnetic field strength suddenly increasing by a factor of approximately 2 1/2, as expected when the solar wind slows down. The magnetic field has remained at these high levels since December. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., built the magnetometers.

Voyager 1 also observed an increase in the number of high-speed electrically charged electrons and ions and a burst of plasma wave noise before the shock. This would be expected if Voyager 1 passed the termination shock. The shock naturally accelerates electrically charged particles that bounce back and forth between the fast and slow winds on opposite sides of the shock, and these particles can generate plasma waves.

"Voyager's observations over the past few years show the termination shock is far more complicated than anyone thought," said Dr. Eric Christian, Discipline Scientist for the Sun-Solar System Connection research program at NASA Headquarters, Washington.

The result is being presented today at a press conference in the Morial Convention Center, New Orleans, during the 2005 Joint Assembly meeting of Earth and space science organizations.

For more information about Voyager visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/voyager_agu.html

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Blackarrow
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Posts: 946
From: BELFAST, UNITED KINGDOM
Registered: Feb 2002

posted May 24, 2005 08:20 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Blackarrow     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
It occurs to mer that after the Pluto mission due to be launched next year, which will leave the Solar System, all future planetary probes will probably be designed to orbit or land on their planetary targets. Therefore, after Pluto-Kuiper, the next mission to leave the Solar System will be a mission actually designed to explore the space between the stars, and oher star systems. It's a big galaxy out there if you haven't got warp drive!

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Ben
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From: Daytona Beach, FL
Registered: May 2000

posted May 24, 2005 08:43 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Ben   Click Here to Email Ben     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Yea. I would wager that there will be solar sail tests in the future that will be designed to leave the solar system (since that is one of the things that these very very early prototypes are being designed for...possible interstellar travel at high speed).

There may one day be a test to see how fast one can reach Pluto, or leave the solar system.

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-Ben

www.LaunchPhotography.com

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