MEDIA
RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Contact:
Guy Webster, (818) 354-6278
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE December 18, 2000
MOST
DISTANT SPACECRAFT MAY REACH SHOCK ZONE SOON
A NASA spacecraft headed out of the solar system at a speed
that would streak from New York to Los Angeles in less than
four minutes could reach the first main feature of the boundary
between our solar system and interstellar space within three
years.
The Voyager 1 spacecraft, the farthest human-made object
from Earth, may reach the beginning of his boundary region
between early next year and the end of 2003, said Dr. Edward
Stone, Voyager project scientist and director of NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
The feature, called the termination shock, is not quite
where the Sun's influence ends. It is where a pressure wave
backs up from an even farther-out boundary, the heliopause,
where the region of space dominated by particles streaming
from the Sun ends and interstellar space begins.
But the termination shock won't stand still. Expected solar
activity will likely crank up the solar wind of outbound
particles and begin pushing back the heliopause in about
three years, Stone said. The shock region could move outward
even faster than Voyager 1.
"If
we don't encounter it in the next three years, we may not
catch up with it for several more years," Stone said.
"On the other hand, it would be wonderful if we got
out past it, then it overtook us so we could have a second
look at it."
Stone estimated the distance to the shock and the heliopause
during a Monday session of a five-day conference of the
American Geophysical Union in San Francisco.
Voyager 1, built, flown and managed by JPL, left Earth in
1977 and made a string of discoveries while flying past
Jupiter in 1979 and Saturn in 1980. It is now about twice
as far from the Sun as Pluto's orbit. Its twin, Voyager
2, made a grand tour of four outer planets and is currently
about 80 percent as distant as Voyager 1. NASA's current
mission for both craft is to learn more about the edge of
the solar system and what is just outside of it.
As the Sun moves through the galaxy, it hauls with it a
surrounding bubble, the heliosphere, filled with particles
of the solar wind. The solar wind carries an average of
only about a half-dozen ions per cubic centimeter (about
100 per cubic inch) at Earth's orbit and even fewer farther
from the Sun, but it exerts an outward pressure and extends
the magnetic influence of the Sun.
Somewhere roughly 100 or more times farther from the Sun
than Earth is, the pressure of the solar wind is counterbalanced
by a pressure outside of the heliosphere. That's the pressure
of the interstellar wind, a faint current of particles flowing
through the galaxy. The interstellar wind surrounds each
star's sphere of influence like a river around rocks whose
shapes could change like elastic balloons.
"We're
hoping to learn how big a bubble the Sun creates for itself
and, for the first time, how much pressure there is in interstellar
space," Stone said.
One method of estimating the distance to the bubble's edge
makes use of radio emissions that are believed to originate
from the boundary between interstellar space and the heliosphere
in response to bursts of particle ejections by the Sun.
Measuring the time lag between when a solar burst occurs
and when the response echoes back to the spacecraft allows
a calculation of how far the particles traveled to reach
the heliopause.
Another method uses the difference between the rate at which
cosmic rays of a certain type are reaching Voyager 1 and
the rate at which they are reaching Voyager 2.
Those methods and others suggest the termination shock may
be 80 to 90 times as far from the Sun as Earth is, Stone
said. That's farther than anticipated earlier in the Voyager
mission.
The shock is expected to have particle-density and magnetic-
field characteristics that will make its detection unambiguous
when Voyager 1 reaches it, providing an accuracy check for
the ideas used in predicting its location.
"Once
we know where the termination shock is, we'll have a better
idea how much farther it is to the heliopause," Stone
said.
Additional information about the Voyager Interstellar Mission
is available at http://vraptor.jpl.nasa.gov . JPL, a division
of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages
the mission for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington,
D.C.