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Voyager 2 Probe Enters Interstellar Space

Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:35 pm
Posted by DavidTheGnome
Monroe
Member since Apr 2015
29214 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:35 pm
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For the second time in history, a human-made object has reached the space between the stars. NASA’s Voyager 2 probe now has exited the heliosphere – the protective bubble of particles and magnetic fields created by the Sun.

Comparing data from different instruments aboard the trailblazing spacecraft, mission scientists determined the probe crossed the outer edge of the heliosphere on Nov. 5. This boundary, called the heliopause, is where the tenuous, hot solar wind meets the cold, dense interstellar medium. Its twin, Voyager 1, crossed this boundary in 2012, but Voyager 2 carries a working instrument that will provide first-of-its-kind observations of the nature of this gateway into interstellar space.

Voyager 2 now is slightly more than 11 billion miles (18 billion kilometers) from Earth. Mission operators still can communicate with Voyager 2 as it enters this new phase of its journey, but information – moving at the speed of light – takes about 16.5 hours to travel from the spacecraft to Earth. By comparison, light traveling from the Sun takes about eight minutes to reach Earth.

The most compelling evidence of Voyager 2’s exit from the heliosphere came from its onboard Plasma Science Experiment (PLS), an instrument that stopped working on Voyager 1 in 1980, long before that probe crossed the heliopause. Until recently, the space surrounding Voyager 2 was filled predominantly with plasma flowing out from our Sun. This outflow, called the solar wind, creates a bubble – the heliosphere – that envelopes the planets in our solar system. The PLS uses the electrical current of the plasma to detect the speed, density, temperature, pressure and flux of the solar wind. The PLS aboard Voyager 2 observed a steep decline in the speed of the solar wind particles on Nov. 5. Since that date, the plasma instrument has observed no solar wind flow in the environment around Voyager 2, which makes mission scientists confident the probe has left the heliosphere



Heliosphere

The heliosphere is the vast bubble-like region of space surrounding and created by the Sun. In plasma physics terms, this is the cavity formed by the Sun in the surrounding interstellar medium. The plasma "blown" out from the outer layers of the Sun, known as the solar wind, creates this bubble, filling it and maintaining it against the outside pressure of interstellar plasma, which permeates our galaxy. The solar wind flows outward from the Sun for billions of kilometres, far beyond even the region of Pluto, until it encounters the termination shock, where its motion slows abruptly.



Posted by Honest Tune
Louisiana
Member since Dec 2011
15772 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:36 pm to
Far out. Would be unbelievable to get those views.
Posted by djangochained
Gardere
Member since Jul 2013
19054 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:37 pm to
You would see a lot of nothing
Posted by Honest Tune
Louisiana
Member since Dec 2011
15772 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:38 pm to
We are talking space here, not Nebraska.
Posted by Cosmo
glassman's guest house
Member since Oct 2003
120388 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:39 pm to
I voyaged into your mom with my probe last night
Posted by cable
Member since Oct 2018
9657 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:44 pm to
Don't care. I just want to visit Uranus.
Posted by momentoftruth87
Member since Oct 2013
71568 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:46 pm to
Crazy how there is technology like this and we bitch about simple things. Imagine how much would get done if we treated everyone the same and worked together.
Posted by soccerfüt
Location: A Series of Tubes
Member since May 2013
65857 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:49 pm to
That “Oort Cloud” does not sound inviting.
quote:


Posted by CoachChappy
Member since May 2013
32594 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:50 pm to
If you have time, there are videos out there explaining all what went into launching the Voyagers. They had to get them off at a certain time, because the Planets were lined up in a way they could use the gravity of the planets to swing around and shoot them farther into space. It’s like a 5 rail bumper shot in pool, but over millions of miles and the bumpers could destroy the ball.
This post was edited on 12/10/18 at 8:10 pm
Posted by foshizzle
Washington DC metro
Member since Mar 2008
40599 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:50 pm to
quote:

Would be unbelievable to get those views.


It wouldn't be much different from the view from the ISS looking away from the Sun and Earth when the station is in shadow. The main one would be that the Sun would be an unusually bright pinprick of light. You wouldn't be able to see any of the planets of course.
Posted by foshizzle
Washington DC metro
Member since Mar 2008
40599 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:53 pm to
quote:


That “Oort Cloud” does not sound inviting.


Don't worry. That diagram has distances on a logarithmic scale, so given that it took 30-ish years to get to 100AU it'll take another 300-400 years to get to the cloud. It won't exit the cloud for for 250,000 years or such.
Posted by Parmen
Member since Apr 2016
18317 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:54 pm to
Posted by TigerFanatic99
South Bend, Indiana
Member since Jan 2007
27680 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:55 pm to
quote:

That “Oort Cloud” does not sound inviting.



She's a cold, mean bitch.
Posted by CoachChappy
Member since May 2013
32594 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 7:58 pm to
quote:

That diagram has distances on a logarithmic scale, so given that it took 30-ish years to get to 100AU it'll take another 300-400 years to get to the cloud. It won't exit the cloud for for 250,000 years or such.

Humans will be the only ones to see voyager. We will most likely develop interstellar travel before that thing leaves the OORT cloud.
Posted by foshizzle
Washington DC metro
Member since Mar 2008
40599 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 8:18 pm to
quote:

We will most likely develop interstellar travel before that thing leaves the OORT cloud.


That might actually be true - and I'm saying that understanding how incredibly unlikely practical interstellar travel actually is.
Posted by waiting4saturday
Covington, LA
Member since Sep 2005
9742 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 8:25 pm to
Gonna be fun when we create a warp speed drives and catch up to those things in 10 minutes.
Posted by CoachChappy
Member since May 2013
32594 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 8:47 pm to
quote:

and I'm saying that understanding how incredibly unlikely practical interstellar travel actually is.

and mankind is more likely to bomb itself back to the fricking Stone Age before it ever cooperates enough to accomplish interstellar travel
Posted by Lou Pai
Member since Dec 2014
28149 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 8:50 pm to
And none of this has anything to do with LSU's recruiting class so tell me why I should give a frick again?
Posted by bad93ex
Member since Sep 2018
27342 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 8:54 pm to
Alright, alright, alright
Posted by Goat Rider
Boulder, CO
Member since Feb 2018
947 posts
Posted on 12/10/18 at 9:15 pm to
This animation shows the trajectory that voyager 2 has taken through the solar system since it was launched in 1977.

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