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http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/space_voyager_dc

Voyager 1 reaches solar system's final frontier

Wed May 25,12:00 PM ET


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - NASA's Voyager 1 has reached the final frontier of
our solar system, having traveled through a turbulent place where
electrically charged particles from the Sun crash into thin gas from
interstellar space.

Astronomers tracking the little spaceship's 26-year journey from Earth
believe Voyager 1 has gone through a region known as termination shock,
some 8.7 billion miles from the Sun, and entered an area called the
heliosheath.

"Voyager 1 has entered the final lap on its race to the edge of
interstellar space," Edward Stone, Voyager project scientist at the
California Institute of Technology, said in a statement released Tuesday.

Voyager watchers theorized last November that the craft might be reaching
this bumpy region of space when the charged solar particles known as the
solar wind seemed to slow down from a top speed of 1.5 million miles per
hour.

This was expected at the area of termination shock, where the solar winds
were expected to decelerate as they bump up against gas from the space
beyond our solar system. It is more than twice as distant as Pluto, the
furthest planet in our system.

By monitoring the craft's speed and the increase in the force of the solar
wind, Voyager scientists now believe the craft has made it through the
shock and into the heliosheath.

Predicting the location of the termination shock was hard because the
precise conditions in interstellar space are unknown and the termination
shock can expand, contract and ripple, depending on changes in the speed
and pressure of the solar wind.

"Voyager's observations over the past few years show the termination shock
is far more complicated than anyone thought," said Eric Christian, a
scientist with NASA's Sun-Solar System Connection program.

Voyager 1 and its twin spacecraft Voyager 2 were launched in 1977 on a
mission to explore the giant planets Jupiter and Saturn. The pair kept
going, however, and the mission was extended.

Voyager 2 went on to explore Uranus and Neptune, the only spacecraft to
have visited these outer planets. Both Voyagers are now part of the
Voyager Interstellar Mission to explore the outermost edge of the Sun's
domain.

Both Voyagers are capable of returning scientific data from a full range
of instruments, with adequate electrical power and attitude control
propellant to keep operating until 2020.

Wherever they go, the Voyagers each carry a golden phonograph record which
bears messages from Earth, including natural sounds of surf, wind, thunder
and animals. There are also musical selections, spoken greetings in 55
languages, along with instructions and equipment on how to play the record.


More information and images can be found online at
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/voyager_agu.html



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