Voyager Probe F*cks Right Off

<strong>Voyager probe 'leaves Solar System'</strong>

By Jonathan Amos Science correspondent, BBC News

_66509267_r2620085-voyager_spacecraft-spVoyager will live out its days circling the centre of our Milky Way Galaxy
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The Voyager-1 spacecraft has become the first manmade object to leave the Solar System.

Scientists say the probe's instruments indicate it has moved beyond the bubble of hot gas from our Sun and is now moving in the space between the stars.

Launched in 1977, Voyager was sent initially to study the outer planets, but then just kept on going.

Today, the veteran Nasa mission is almost 19 billion km (12 billion miles) from home.

This distance is so vast that it takes 17 hours now for a radio signal sent from Voyager to reach receivers here on Earth.

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Voyager's epic journey
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"This is really a key milestone that we'd been hoping we would reach when we started this project over 40 years ago - that we would get a spacecraft into interstellar space," said Prof Ed Stone, the chief scientist on the venture.

"Scientifically it's a major milestone, but also historically - this is one of those journeys of exploration like circumnavigating the globe for the first time or having a footprint on the Moon for the first time. This is the first time we've begun to explore the space between the stars," he told BBC News.

Sensors on Voyager had been indicating for some time that its local environment had changed.

The data that finally convinced the mission team to call the jump to interstellar space came from the probe's Plasma Wave Science (PWS) instrument. This can measure the density of charged particles in Voyager's vicinity.

Readings taken in April/May this year and October/November last year revealed a near-100-fold jump in the number of protons occupying every cubic metre of space.

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Mission chief scientist Professor Ed Stone: "We got there!"

Scientists have long theorised such a spike would eventually be observed if Voyager could get beyond the influence of the magnetic fields and particle wind that billow from the surface of the Sun.

When the Voyager team put the new data together with information from the other instruments onboard, they calculated the moment of escape to have occurred on or about 25 August, 2012. This conclusion is contained in a report published by the journal Science.

"This is big; it's really impressive - the first human-made object to make it out into interstellar space," said Prof Don Gurnett from the University of Iowa and the principal investigator on the PWS.

On 25 August, 2012, Voyager-1 was some 121 Astronomical Units away. That is, 121 times the separation between the Earth and the Sun.

Breaching the boundary, known technically as the heliopause, was, said the English Astronomer Royal, Prof Sir Martin Rees, a remarkable achievement: "It's utterly astonishing that this fragile artefact, based on 1970s technology, can signal its presence from this immense distance."

Although now embedded in the gas, dust and magnetic fields from other stars, Voyager still feels a gravitational tug from the Sun, just as some comets do that lie even further out in space. But to all intents and purposes, it has left what most people would define as the Solar System. It is now in a completely new domain.

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Nasa's Voyager probes
  • Voyager 2 launched on 20 August 1977; Voyager 1 lifted off on 5 September the same year
  • Their official missions were to study Jupiter and Saturn, but the probes were able to continue on
  • The Voyager 1 probe is now the furthest human-built object from Earth
  • Both probes carry discs with recordings designed to portray the diversity of culture on Earth

Voyager-1 departed Earth on 5 September 1977, a few days after its sister spacecraft, Voyager-2.

The pair's primary objective was to survey the planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune - a task they completed in 1989.

They were then steered towards deep space. It is expected that their plutonium power sources will stop supplying electricity in about 10 years, at which point their instruments and their 20W transmitters will die.

Voyager-1 will not approach another star for nearly 40,000 years, even though it is moving at 45km/s (100,000mph).

"Voyager-1 will be in orbit around the centre of our galaxy with all its stars for billions of years," said Prof Stone.

_69809416_dot.jpgIn 1990, Voyager-1 looked back and took a picture of Earth - a "pale blue dot"

The probe's work is not quite done, however. For as long as they have working instruments, scientists will want to sample the new environment.

The new region through which Voyager is now flying was generated and sculpted by big stars that exploded millions of years ago.

There is indirect evidence and models to describe the conditions in this medium, but Voyager can now measure them for real and report back.

The renowned British planetary scientist Prof Fred Taylor commented: "As a young post-doc, I went to [Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory] and worked for a while with the team that was doing the science definition study for the Outer Planets Grand Tour, which later became Voyager.

"It seemed so incredible and exciting to think we would see and explore Jupiter and Saturn close up, let alone Uranus and Neptune.

"The idea that the spacecraft would then exit the Solar System altogether was so way out, figuratively as well as literally, that we didn't even discuss it then, although I suppose we knew it would happen someday. Forty-three years later, that day has arrived, and Voyager is still finding new frontiers."

_69806156_2a196dfb-fba1-4851-8c8d-22945bThe Sun sits in an extensive bubble of hot gas called the heliosphere
  • Solar wind: The stream of charged particles blown off the Sun and travelling at "supersonic" speeds (white arrows)
  • Termination shock: Area where particles from the Sun begin to slow and clash with matter from deep space
  • Heliosheath: A vast, turbulent expanse where the solar wind piles up as it presses outward against interstellar matter
  • Heliopause: The boundary between the solar wind and the interstellar wind, where the pressure of both are in balance

[email protected] and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos

4o years later and they still haven't got the warp drive working?

 

C'mon Scotty, what are you doing?

And here on earth we are stuck with batteries that can't last a day! What did they put in that thing! 

I think they’re being generous with their description of ‘the Solar System’, aren’t they?

Pass the Oort Cloud, then get back to me.

And here on earth we are stuck with batteries that can't last a day! What did they put in that thing! 

Plutonium.

Only a couple of hundred years before it thinks it's god.

 

Also, NASA announced it left the heliosphere the same day Neil Armstrong died in 2012. Hmm. Convenient.

Farking hipster probes, too cool for this solar system.

Farking hipster probes, too cool for this solar system.

Went near the sun before it was cool?

Can't wait to hear the alien response to Chuck's Johhny B. Good.

Colour me skeptical — I’ve seen the “leaving the solar system” article about ten times now, and each time they later back down on it.

 

Farking hipster probes, too cool for this solar system.

Went near the sun before it was cool?

 

They're, like, five billion years ahead of their time!

4o years later and they still haven't got the warp drive working?

 

C'mon Scotty, what are you doing?

Voyager did provide a neat and convenient plot device for the first Star Trek movie. 

 

4o years later and they still haven't got the warp drive working?

 

C'mon Scotty, what are you doing?

Voyager did provide a neat and convenient plot device for the first Star Trek movie. 

 

and Futurama

And here on earth we are stuck with batteries that can't last a day! What did they put in that thing! 

plutonium 

Colour me skeptical — I've seen the "leaving the solar system" article about ten times now, and each time they later back down on it.

Yep, it has left the system quite a few times now, obviously it gets homesick and comes back.

or people get excited as is passes different benchmarks coupled with poor journalism. There's not really an official 'You have just left the solar system.. next stop 4.2 light years' sign

One day we'll build that sign though. And a Welcome to the Solar System! sign. And a plutonium refueling station. And then someone will build a fibreglass model of solar system ten times actual size as a tourist attraction. This will about the time when the outer suburbs of Sydney finally reach the edge of the solar system, and at night young guys will hang out by the Giant Solar System, sometimes doing doughies in their VL or stealing Uranus.

 

And here on earth we are stuck with batteries that can't last a day! What did they put in that thing! 

plutonium 

 

Of which there is very little left on Earth apparently.

I wish I was on it. Hawthorn and Fremantle FFS.

At 34 hours for a round trip of communications, I hope it doesnt need to take fast evasive action. And how does a 20watt 1970’s-tech transmitter work over that distance!?

It’s astonishing that these things are still functioning at all, let alone still under control and usable. Amazing.