Graphic showing the location of Voyagers 1 and 2 Graphic : NASA/JPL-CalTech

Six years ago, the Voyager 1 spacecraft informed scientists that it had become the first man-made object to enter interstellar space. Now, Voyager 2 has begun to return signs that its own exit from the Solar System could be coming soon.



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Two of Voyager 2's instruments have measured an increase in the number of high-energy particles called cosmic rays hitting the spacecraft, according to a NASA release. Scientists think that the heliosphere, the region of particles and magnetic fields under the S un’s influence, blocks some cosmic rays. An increase in their rate means that the probe could be nearing the heliopause, the heliosphere’s outer boundary.

This could be a taste of things yet to come. “We’re going to learn a lot in the coming months, but we still don’t know when we’ll reach the heliopause,” Voyager Project Scientist Ed Stone said, according to the release. “We’re not there yet—that’s one thing I can say with confidence.”

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Voyagers 1 and 2 launched in 1977 in order to explore Saturn and Jupiter. Voyager 1 then embarked on its mission out of the S olar S ystem, while Voyager 2 was able to return data on Uranus and Neptune before starting its own decades-long journey . The probes made discoveries, returned important data, and presented iconic images of the outer planets. Scientists still operate the probes 40 years later, though the missions have changed—now, the spacecraf t explore the So lar S ystem’s limits, periodically sending back data via radio waves.

Voyager 1 measured an increase in cosmic rays back in May 2012 before crossing the heliopause three months later—a measurement accompanied by a sudden increase in the density of the ambient plasma. Perhaps Voyager 2 is now getting close, too, though one Princeton scientist who uses Voyager data, Jamie Rankin, stressed to Gizmodo that Voyager 2 hasn’t yet reached interstellar space.


Randy Gladstone, Southwest Research Institute sc ientist on the New Horizons mission, explained why crossing the heliopause with a second probe is important: “As with almost anything, doing something the second time can tell you whether you really understand it or not. Voyager 2’s crossing is in a much different place, and while current models can adjust for that, it is almost certain those models are too simple to get it perfectly. We always learn a lot in these situations (it’s a big reason why we have a Voyager 1 and a Voyager 2).”

It’s tough to say whether Voyager 2 will leave the S olar S ystem soon. But it’s another reminder of how incredible these missions are . Voyager 2 is currently 11 billion miles from the Sun, 118 times the distance between the Sun and Earth. Voyager 1 is over 13 billion miles from the Sun, which is 144 times the Sun-to-Earth distance. Yet they can still send us interesting scientific results, and yes, explore space even beyond the Sun’s influence.




[NASA/JPL-CalTech]

