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Saturday, December 18, 2010

Voyager near Solar System's edge



By Jonathan Amos for BBC News, San Francisco


14 December 2010



Voyager is approaching the edge of the bubble of charged particles the Sun has thrown out into space. Now 17.4bn km (10.8bn miles) from home, the veteran probe has detected a distinct change in the flow of particles that surround it. These particles, which emanate from the Sun, are no longer travelling outwards but are moving sideways. It means Voyager must be very close to making the jump to interstellar space - the space between the stars. Edward Stone, the Voyager project scientist, lauded the explorer and the fascinating science it continues to return 33 years after launch. "When Voyager was launched, the space age itself was only 20 years old, so there was no basis to know that spacecraft could last so long," he told BBC News. "We had no idea how far we would have to travel to get outside the Solar System. We now know that in roughly five years, we should be outside for the first time." Dr Stone was speaking here at the American Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall Meeting, the largest gathering of Earth scientists in the world.



Voyager 1 was launched on 5 September 1977, and its sister spacecraft, Voyager 2, on 20 August 1977. The Nasa probes' initial goal was to survey the outer planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune, a task completed in 1989. They were then despatched towards deep space, in the general direction of the centre of our Milky Way Galaxy. Sustained by their radioactive power packs, the probes' instruments continue to function well and return data to Earth, although the vast distance between them and Earth means a radio message now has a travel time of about 16 hours. The newly reported observation comes from Voyager 1's Low-Energy Charged Particle Instrument, which has been monitoring the velocity of the solar wind. This stream of charged particles forms a bubble around our Solar System known as the heliosphere. The wind travels at "supersonic" speed until it crosses a shockwave called the termination shock. At this point, the wind then slows dramatically and heats up in a region termed the heliosheath. Voyager has determined the velocity of the wind at its location has now slowed to zero.



"We have gotten to the point where the wind from the Sun, which until now has always had an outward motion, is no longer moving outward; it is only moving sideways so that it can end up going down the tail of the heliosphere, which is a comet-shaped-like object," said Dr Stone, who is based at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California. This phenomenon is a consequence of the wind pushing up against the matter coming from other stars. The boundary between the two is the "official" edge of the Solar System - the heliopause. Once Voyager crosses over, it will be in interstellar space. First hints that Voyager had encountered something new came in June. Several months of further data were required to confirm the observation. "When I realized that we were getting solid zeroes, I was amazed," said Rob Decker, a Voyager Low-Energy Charged Particle Instrument co-investigator from the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland. "Here was Voyager, a spacecraft that has been a workhorse for 33 years, showing us something completely new again." Voyager 1 is racing on towards the heliopause at 17km/s. Dr Stone expects the cross-over to occur within the next few years. Although launched first, Voyager 2 was put on a slower path and is currently just over 14bn km from Earth.



[Cool or what!]

3 comments:

wstachour said...

Fabulous! The stuff of science fiction...without the fiction!

I think of this small unmanned craft leaving its home world behind @ 10 miles a second, keeping itself warm and powered with its little reactor; it's all very Star Trek.

I read on the NASA site about power generation and how it tails off. They have a schedule of what equipment they anticipate will be turned off at what time to accommodate the waning power. Odd and poignant to think that from this great distance commands will be sent to shut off this and that device, knowing that they'll never be reactivated and in the absolute cold would not be able to resume function anyway.

And the day will come when Voyager, like the Spirit rover on Mars, will fail to respond to commands, will be unable to keep itself going and the spark will go out.

CyberKitten said...

wunelle said: Fabulous! The stuff of science fiction...without the fiction!

Isn't it just. That's why I love both science *&* science-fiction.

wunelle said: it's all very Star Trek.

Especially when a Klingon bird of prey uses it as it target practice.... or it ends up being incorporated into a giant machine that comes back looking for its 'creator'.

wunelle said: Odd and poignant to think that from this great distance commands will be sent to shut off this and that device, knowing that they'll never be reactivated and in the absolute cold would not be able to resume function anyway.

Very poignant and very sad....

wunelle said: And the day will come when Voyager, like the Spirit rover on Mars, will fail to respond to commands, will be unable to keep itself going and the spark will go out.

Hopefully it'll be picked up by something at some point... I'm sure in the future there will be arguments about whether or not to bring it back to put it in a museuem or whether to leave it on its continuing journey to the stars.

wstachour said...

Of course, the most delicious idea is that someone else finds it, a little device constituting incontrovertible evidence of some entity somewhere capable of building it. It's a perfect exemplar of Haley's pocket-watch "purpose" (which creationists try to attach to life itself); but no species advanced enough to detect it and capture it could mistake its purpose... fabulous to think about!