NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

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  • skahound
    Someone MARRY ME!! LOL
    • Jun 2004
    • 11411

    NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

    The Voyager I spacecraft has moved into the solar system's final frontier, a vast area where the sun's influence gives way to interstellar space, NASA's Web site reports.

    "Voyager has entered the final lap on its race to the edge of interstellar space, as it begins exploring the solar system's final frontier," said Edward Stone, Voyager project scientist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, in a statement on the Web site Tuesday. At 8.7 billion miles from the sun, Voyager I has entered the heliosheath, a region beyond termination shock -- the critical boundary that marks the transition from the solar system into interstellar space.

    Contrary to popular belief, space is not an empty void. Rather, the solar system is awash in solar wind, charged gases that flow off the sun at supersonic speed. The wind travels at an average speed ranging from 300 to 700 kilometers per second (700,000 to 1.5 million mph). At the termination shock boundary, the solar wind dissipates and begins to give way to the interstellar medium -- the gases that float in the void between stars.

    Instruments aboard Voyager I able to measure the solar wind's speed suggest the probe "has passed through the termination shock into the slower, denser wind beyond," NASA's Web site says. "Voyager's observations over the past few years show that the termination shock is far more complicated than anyone thought," said a statement from Eric Christian, discipline scientist for NASA's Sun-Solar System Connection research program in Washington.

    Beyond the heliosheath lies the heliopause -- the boundary where the pressure of the solar wind and interstellar wind are in balance. Once Voyager I passes through the heliopause, it will be in interstellar space.

    Voyager I and its sister ship, Voyager II, were launched in 1977 on a mission to explore the solar system. Voyager I passed Jupiter in March 1979 and Saturn in November 1980. In 1998, it became the most distant man-made object from Earth. Voyager II, which observed Uranus and Neptune, is 6.5 billion miles from the sun, heading in the opposite direction of Voyager I and at a slightly slower speed.

    The Voyager probes were equipped with three radioisotope thermoelectric generators to produce electrical power for the spacecraft systems and instruments. Barring hardware failure, Voyager I and II boast enough power and communications capability to keep radioing back to Earth until 2020, NASA says.

    ***************

    I'm curious to know how long it takes for the signal to travel from the ship to Earth.
    A good shower head and my right hand - the two best lovers that I ever had.
  • Steve Graham
    DJ Jelly
    • Jun 2004
    • 12887

    #2
    Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

    if no one has ever been outside of the solar system, how the hell do they know what is out there? and what they are called?

    Comment

    • skahound
      Someone MARRY ME!! LOL
      • Jun 2004
      • 11411

      #3
      Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

      Originally posted by unome
      if no one has ever been outside of the solar system, how the hell do they know what is out there? and what they are called?
      Welcome to the world of astrophysics, quantumphysics, and quantum mechanics.
      A good shower head and my right hand - the two best lovers that I ever had.

      Comment

      • Yao
        DUDERZ get a life!!!
        • Jun 2004
        • 8167

        #4
        Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

        Maybe it'll fly right in god's arse...?
        Blowkick visual & graphic design - No Civilization. Now With Broadband.

        There are but three true sports -- bullfighting, mountain climbing, and motor-racing. The rest are merely games. -Hemingway

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        • sammwalk
          Gold Gabber
          • Jun 2004
          • 769

          #5
          Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

          Originally posted by skahound
          I'm curious to know how long it takes for the signal to travel from the ship to Earth.
          About 13 hours

          Comment

          • skahound
            Someone MARRY ME!! LOL
            • Jun 2004
            • 11411

            #6
            Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

            Originally posted by sammwalk
            Originally posted by skahound
            I'm curious to know how long it takes for the signal to travel from the ship to Earth.
            About 13 hours
            Are you being serious? At 8.7 billion miles? Is it just a standard radio wave?
            A good shower head and my right hand - the two best lovers that I ever had.

            Comment

            • natural.predator
              Fresh Peossy
              • May 2005
              • 27

              #7
              Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

              Voyager 1 is the most distant human-made object in the universe, At the beginning of 2005, the spacecraft was about 94 times as far from the Sun as is Earth. It was deflected northward above the plane of the planets' orbits when it swung by Saturn in 1980 and is now speeding outward from the Sun at nearly one million miles per day, a rate that would take it from Los Angeles to New York in less than four minutes. Long-lived nuclear batteries are expected to provide electrical power until at least 2020 when Voyager 1 will be more than 13 billion miles from Earth and may have reached interstellar space.

              Comment

              • picklemonkey
                Double hoodie beer monster
                • Jun 2004
                • 15373

                #8
                Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

                which way's north in space?

                also, those trekkies need to get over that "final froniter" crap. It's unmapped space, don't make it sound like something it's not.

                Comment

                • palmer
                  Retired or Simply Important
                  • Jun 2004
                  • 5383

                  #9
                  Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

                  north is up


                  todayistomorrow
                  art direction | design | animation

                  Comment

                  • ubiqe
                    Platinum Poster
                    • Jun 2004
                    • 1731

                    #10
                    Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

                    Originally posted by picklemonkey
                    also, those trekkies need to get over that "final froniter" crap. It's unmapped space, don't make it sound like something it's not.
                    exactly what I thought, I don't think there's anything special or different there. Also I wonder what measurement technologies were available in '77... what info the voyagers can pass on to earth? they're a bit outdated now.

                    Comment

                    • skahound
                      Someone MARRY ME!! LOL
                      • Jun 2004
                      • 11411

                      #11
                      Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

                      Originally posted by ubiqe
                      Also I wonder what measurement technologies were available in '77... what info the voyagers can pass on to earth? they're a bit outdated now.
                      From what I've read, for the distances that these ships will travel and the mediums that they are studying, the measurement technologies are the same as they've been for some time now (relative of course, no pun intended). Taking solar wind speed measurements, temperature measurements, density, etc. is roughly the same today as it was 30 years ago. The true advancements have been in quantum theory.
                      A good shower head and my right hand - the two best lovers that I ever had.

                      Comment

                      • cyrus32
                        Gold Gabber
                        • Jul 2004
                        • 510

                        #12
                        Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier



                        way to go urkle
                        Edited - Bossy to racey for work

                        Comment

                        • Kamal
                          Administrator
                          • May 2002
                          • 28833

                          #13
                          Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

                          Originally posted by unome
                          if no one has ever been outside of the solar system, how the hell do they know what is out there? and what they are called?
                          well they've photographed a bulk of what lies beyond our solar system and a bulk of the neighbouring solar systems and galaxies thanks to hubble, so it not all a mystey, what remains a mystery is the stuff they haven't been able to see (not only via hubble / xray telescopes) but have been able to predict the existence of based on the existence of other objects that have been proven....

                          thats when all the quantum physics and other fun stuff comes into play

                          -e-
                          www.mjwebhosting.com

                          Jib says:
                          he isnt worth the water that splashes up into your asshole while you're shitting
                          Originally posted by ace_dl
                          Guys and Gals, I have to hurry/leaving for short-term vacations.
                          I won't be back until next Tuesday, so if Get Carter is the correct answer, I would appreciate of someone else posts a new cap for me

                          Comment

                          • Steve Graham
                            DJ Jelly
                            • Jun 2004
                            • 12887

                            #14
                            Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

                            all this is very intriguing.. the unknown and what not.

                            but how do we really know this is true? i mean, man has never really been to the moon, every one knows that. so how are we to believe this Voyager is really as far out as it is?

                            Comment

                            • Kamal
                              Administrator
                              • May 2002
                              • 28833

                              #15
                              Re: NASA: Voyager I enters solar system's final frontier

                              Originally posted by unome
                              all this is very intriguing.. the unknown and what not.

                              but how do we really know this is true? i mean, man has never really been to the moon, every one knows that. so how are we to believe this Voyager is really as far out as it is?
                              there are 2 approaches to proving something (esp with space exploration)

                              A) Maths
                              B) Get over there (with your eyes via telescopes or in person)


                              Mathematically you can travel faster than light by several means, realistically its a different story. Similarly you can prove / disprove the existence / non existence of several things in space but without having actually gone there, its still hypothetical and subjective.

                              But if we have gone there (taking Voyagers example), its all a matter of "Do you believe in the governmnt ? The truth it out there...." type of scenario.... at this stage, I dont see any reason for NASA to say "HUSSHHH Dont say nothing yet" since they havent found anything truly significant.

                              -e-
                              www.mjwebhosting.com

                              Jib says:
                              he isnt worth the water that splashes up into your asshole while you're shitting
                              Originally posted by ace_dl
                              Guys and Gals, I have to hurry/leaving for short-term vacations.
                              I won't be back until next Tuesday, so if Get Carter is the correct answer, I would appreciate of someone else posts a new cap for me

                              Comment

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