The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Nasa probe crosses into ‘space between the stars’

Voyager 2 sends back vital informatio­n on riddle of sun’s protective bubble

- NILIMA MARSHALL,

Nasa’s Voyager 2 has reported back with its initial cosmic findings – a year after becoming the second man-made object to “leave” the solar system.

The probe blasted off from Earth 42 years ago – 16 days before its twin spacecraft Voyager 1 – and crossed the outer edge of the sun’s protective bubble, known as the heliopause, on November 5 2018.

It entered the interstell­ar medium – which is the region outside the heliopause made up of gas, dust and cosmic rays – six years after Voyager 1 due to its slower trajectory.

In a series of papers published in the journal Nature Astronomy, researcher­s confirmed the spacecraft’s journey into the “space between the stars” by noting a “definitive jump” in the density of the plasma – made up of charged particles and gas – in interstell­ar space.

According to the scientists, this jump was detected by one of the instrument­s on Voyager 2 and is evidence of the probe making its way “from the hot, lower-density plasma characteri­stic of the solar wind to the cool, higher-density plasma of interstell­ar space”.

It is also similar to the plasma density jump experience­d by Voyager 1 when it crossed into interstell­ar space, the researcher­s added.

Among many things, the astronomer­s are looking to gain a better understand­ing of how the solar winds – the stream of charge particles coming out of the sun – interact with the interstell­ar winds – made up of particles from other stars.

Dr Edward Stone, a professor of physics at the California Institute of Technology and former director of the Nasa Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said: “We are trying to understand the nature of the boundary where these two winds collide.”

The astronomer­s believe the probes’ journeys – with their different mission goals and trajectori­es – give “valuable clues” about the structure of the heliospher­e – a vast bubble encompassi­ng the sun and the solar system.

Bill Kurth, a research scientist at the University of Iowa and one of the authors

It implies that the heliospher­e is symmetric. BILL KURTH

of the studies, said: “It implies that the heliospher­e is symmetric, at least at the two points where the Voyager spacecraft crossed.”

In another study, a different team reported the presence of layers “on both sides of the heliopause”.

While scientists were aware of the inner layer, the presence of the outer layer became evident only after Voyager 2 crossed into interstell­ar space.

Dr Stone said the crafts’ plutonium power sources will eventually stop supplying electricit­y, at which point their instrument­s and their transmitte­rs will die.

He added: “In another five years or so we may not have enough scientific instrument­s to power it any longer.”

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