Thursday, September 19, 2024

Voyager 1 Heads Into the Zone

The Voyager space probe continues to go where no man or man made object has gone before. NASA announce earlier this week the unmanned Voyager heads to the unabridged expanse where the sun has no influence and solar winds pound into the thin gas between stars.

Voyager 1 Heads Into the Zone Voyager 1 Heads Into The Zone
“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.

At this point, NASA’s not sure what’s going to happen next because they’re not sure where the line is for end of the solar system and the beginning of the shock and it shifts some too. The point that really brought this to NASA’s attention was the increase in the magnetic field strength.

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’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.

What happens now and what’s out there is now anybodys bet as Voyager continues running through the “undiscovered country”.

John Stith is a staff writer for Murdok covering technology and business.

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