NASA's Voyager 1 craft enters unfamiliar space
ALICIA CHANG, AP
LOS ANGELES (AP) — New research pinpoints the current location of NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft: It's still in our solar system.
Since
last summer, the long-running spacecraft has been exploring uncharted
territory where the effects of interstellar space, or the space between
stars, can be felt. Scientists don't
know how thick this newfound region in the solar system is or how much
farther Voyager 1 has to travel to break to the other side.
"It
could actually be anytime or it could be several more years," said
chief scientist Ed Stone of the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which
manages the mission.
Stone
first described this unexpected zone at a meeting of the American
Geophysical Union last year. A trio of papers published online Thursday
in the journal Science confirmed just how
strange this new layer is.
Soon
after Voyager 1 crossed into this region last August, low-energy
charged particles that had been plentiful suddenly zipped outside while
high-energy cosmic rays from interstellar
space streamed inward. Readings by one of Voyager 1's instruments
showed an abrupt increase in the magnetic field strength, but there was
no change in the direction of the magnetic field lines — a sign that
Voyager 1 has not yet exited the solar system.
Voyager
1 and its twin, Voyager 2, were launched in 1977 to visit the giant gas
planets, beaming back dazzling postcards of Jupiter, Saturn and their
moons. Voyager 2 went on to tour
Uranus and Neptune. After planet-hopping, they were sent on a
trajectory toward interstellar space.
Voyager
1 is about 11 ½ billion miles from the sun. Voyager 2 is about 9½
billion miles from the sun. The nuclear-powered spacecraft have enough
fuel to operate their instruments until
around 2020.
In
the meantime, scientists are looking for any clues of a departure.
Given the time it takes to process the data, mission scientist Leonard
Burlaga said there will be a lag between when
Voyager 1 finally sails into interstellar space and when the team can
confirm the act. Then there's always the possibility of surprises beyond
the solar system.
"Crossing may not be an instantaneous thing," Burlaga said. "It may be complicated."
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