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Heliosphere

The heliosphere is the magnetosphere, astrosphere, and outermost atmospheric layer of the Sun. It takes the shape of a vast, tailed bubble-like region of space. In plasma physics terms, it is the cavity formed by the Sun in the surrounding interstellar medium. The "bubble" of the heliosphere is continuously "inflated" by plasma originating from the Sun, known as the solar wind. Outside the heliosphere, this solar plasma gives way to the interstellar plasma permeating the Milky Way. As part of the interplanetary magnetic field, the heliosphere shields the Solar System from significant amounts of cosmic ionizing radiation; uncharged gamma rays are, however, not affected.[1] Its name was likely coined by Alexander J. Dessler, who is credited with the first use of the word in the scientific literature in 1967.[2] The scientific study of the heliosphere is heliophysics, which includes space weather and space climate.

  • Top: Diagram of the heliosphere as it travels through the interstellar medium:
    1. Heliosheath: the outer region of the heliosphere; the solar wind is compressed and turbulent
    2. Heliopause: the boundary between the solar wind and interstellar wind where they are in equilibrium.
  • Middle: water running into a sink as an analogy for the heliosphere and its different zones (left) and Voyager spacecraft measuring a drop of the solar wind's high-energy particles at the termination shock (right)
  • Bottom: Logarithmic scale of the Solar System and Voyager 1's position. Gliese 445 on the far right, by way of contrast, is approximately 10,000 times further from the Sun than Voyager.

Flowing unimpeded through the Solar System for billions of kilometers, the solar wind extends far beyond even the region of Pluto, until it encounters the "termination shock", where its motion slows abruptly due to the outside pressure of the interstellar medium. The "heliosheath" is a broad transitional region between the termination shock and the heliosphere's outmost edge, the "heliopause". The overall shape of the heliosphere resembles that of a comet; being roughly spherical on one side, with a long trailing tail opposite, known as "heliotail".

Two Voyager program spacecraft explored the outer reaches of the heliosphere, passing through the termination shock and the heliosheath. Voyager 1 encountered heliopause on 25 August 2012, when the spacecraft measured a forty-fold sudden increase in plasma density.[3] Voyager 2 traversed the heliopause on 5 November 2018.[4] Because heliopause marks the boundary between matter originating from the Sun and matter originating from the rest of the galaxy, spacecraft that depart the heliosphere (such as the two Voyagers) are in interstellar space.

Structure edit

 
The Sun photographed at a wavelength of 19.3 nanometers (ultraviolet)

Despite its name, the heliosphere's shape is not a perfect sphere.[5] Its shape is determined by three factors: the interstellar medium (ISM), the solar wind, and the overall motion of the Sun and heliosphere as it passes through the ISM. Because the solar wind and the ISM are both fluids, the heliosphere's shape and size are also fluid. Changes in the solar wind, however, more strongly alter the fluctuating position of the boundaries on short timescales (hours to a few years). The solar wind's pressure varies far more rapidly than the outside pressure of the ISM at any given location. In particular, the effect of the 11-year solar cycle, which sees a distinct maximum and minimum of solar wind activity, is thought to be significant.

On a broader scale, the motion of the heliosphere through the fluid medium of the ISM results in an overall comet-like shape. The solar wind plasma which is moving roughly "upstream" (in the same direction as the Sun's motion through the galaxy) is compressed into a nearly-spherical form, whereas the plasma moving "downstream" (opposite the Sun's motion) flows out for a much greater distance before giving way to the ISM, defining the long, trailing shape of the heliotail.

The limited data available and the unexplored nature of these structures have resulted in many theories as to their form.[6] In 2020, Merav Opher led the team of researchers who determined that the shape of the heliosphere is a crescent[7] that can be described as a deflated croissant.[8][9]

Solar wind edit

The solar wind consists of particles (ionized atoms from the solar corona) and fields like the magnetic field that are produced from the Sun and stream out into space. Because the Sun rotates once approximately every 25 days, the heliospheric magnetic field[10] transported by the solar wind gets wrapped into a spiral. The solar wind affects many other systems in the Solar System; for example, variations in the Sun's own magnetic field are carried outward by the solar wind, producing geomagnetic storms in the Earth's magnetosphere.

 
The heliospheric current sheet out to the orbit of Jupiter

Heliospheric current sheet edit

The heliospheric current sheet is a ripple in the heliosphere created by the rotating magnetic field of the Sun. It marks the boundary between heliospheric magnetic field regions of opposite polarity. Extending throughout the heliosphere, the heliospheric current sheet could be considered the largest structure in the Solar System and is said to resemble a "ballerina's skirt".[11]

Edge structure edit

The outer structure of the heliosphere is determined by the interactions between the solar wind and the winds of interstellar space. The solar wind streams away from the Sun in all directions at speeds of several hundred km/s in the Earth's vicinity. At some distance from the Sun, well beyond the orbit of Neptune, this supersonic wind must slow down to meet the gases in the interstellar medium. This takes place in several stages:

  • The solar wind is traveling at supersonic speeds within the Solar System. At the termination shock, a standing shock wave, the solar wind falls below the speed of sound and becomes subsonic.
  • It was previously thought that once subsonic, the solar wind would be shaped by the ambient flow of the interstellar medium, forming a blunt nose on one side and comet-like heliotail behind, a region called the heliosheath. However, observations in 2009 showed that this model is incorrect.[12][13] As of 2011, it is thought to be filled with a magnetic bubble "foam".[14]
  • The outer surface of the heliosheath, where the heliosphere meets the interstellar medium, is called heliopause. This is the edge of the entire heliosphere. Observations in 2009 led to changes to this model.[12][13]
  • In theory, heliopause causes turbulence in the interstellar medium as the Sun orbits the Galactic Center. Outside the heliopause, would be a turbulent region caused by the pressure of the advancing heliopause against the interstellar medium. However, the velocity of the solar wind relative to the interstellar medium is probably too low for a bow shock.[15]

Termination shock edit

 
A "termination shock" analogy of water in a sink basin.

The termination shock is the point in the heliosphere where the solar wind slows down to subsonic speed (relative to the Sun) because of interactions with the local interstellar medium. This causes compression, heating, and a change in the magnetic field. In the Solar System, the termination shock is believed to be 75 to 90 astronomical units[16] from the Sun. In 2004, Voyager 1 crossed the Sun's termination shock, followed by Voyager 2 in 2007.[3][5][17][18][19][20][21][22]

The shock arises because solar wind particles are emitted from the Sun at about 400 km/s, while the speed of sound (in the interstellar medium) is about 100 km/s. (The exact speed depends on the density, which fluctuates considerably. For comparison, the Earth orbits the Sun at about 30 km/s, the ISS orbits the Earth at about 7.7 km/s, airliners fly over the ground at about 0.2–0.3 km/s, a car on a typical limited-access highway achieves about 0.03 km/s, and humans walk around 0.001 km/s.) The interstellar medium, although very low in density, nonetheless has a relatively constant pressure associated with it; the pressure from the solar wind decreases with the square of the distance from the Sun. As one moves far enough away from the Sun, the pressure of the solar wind drops to where it can no longer maintain supersonic flow against the pressure of the interstellar medium, at which point the solar wind slows to below its speed of sound, causing a shock wave. Further from the Sun, the termination shock is followed by heliopause, where the two pressures become equal and solar wind particles are stopped by the interstellar medium.

Other termination shocks can be seen in terrestrial systems; perhaps the easiest may be seen by simply running a water tap into a sink creating a hydraulic jump. Upon hitting the floor of the sink, the flowing water spreads out at a speed that is higher than the local wave speed, forming a disk of shallow, rapidly diverging flow (analogous to the tenuous, supersonic solar wind). Around the periphery of the disk, a shock front or wall of water forms; outside the shock front, the water moves slower than the local wave speed (analogous to the subsonic interstellar medium).

Evidence presented at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union in May 2005 by Ed Stone suggests that the Voyager 1 spacecraft passed the termination shock in December 2004, when it was about 94 AU from the Sun, by virtue of the change in magnetic readings taken from the craft. In contrast, Voyager 2 began detecting returning particles when it was only 76 AU from the Sun, in May 2006. This implies that the heliosphere may be irregularly shaped, bulging outwards in the Sun's northern hemisphere and pushed inward in the south.[23]

 
Illustration of the heliosphere as released on 28 June 2013 which incorporates results from the Voyager spacecraft.[24] The heliosheath is between the termination shock and the heliopause.

Heliosheath edit

The heliosheath is the region of the heliosphere beyond the termination shock. Here the wind is slowed, compressed, and made turbulent by its interaction with the interstellar medium. At its closest point, the inner edge of the heliosheath lies approximately 80 to 100 AU from the Sun. A proposed model hypothesizes that the heliosheath is shaped like the coma of a comet, and trails several times that distance in the direction opposite to the Sun's path through space. At its windward side, its thickness is estimated to be between 10 and 100 AU.[25] Voyager project scientists have determined that the heliosheath is not "smooth" – it is rather a "foamy zone" filled with magnetic bubbles, each about 1 AU wide.[14] These magnetic bubbles are created by the impact of the solar wind and the interstellar medium.[26][27] Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 began detecting evidence of the bubbles in 2007 and 2008, respectively. The probably sausage-shaped bubbles are formed by magnetic reconnection between oppositely oriented sectors of the solar magnetic field as the solar wind slows down. They probably represent self-contained structures that have detached from the interplanetary magnetic field.

At a distance of about 113 AU, Voyager 1 detected a 'stagnation region' within the heliosheath.[28] In this region, the solar wind slowed to zero,[29][30][31][32] the magnetic field intensity doubled and high-energy electrons from the galaxy increased 100-fold. At about 122 AU, the spacecraft entered a new region that Voyager project scientists called the "magnetic highway", an area still under the influence of the Sun but with some dramatic differences.[33]

Heliopause edit

The heliopause is the theoretical boundary where the Sun's solar wind is stopped by the interstellar medium; where the solar wind's strength is no longer great enough to push back the stellar winds of the surrounding stars. This is the boundary where the interstellar medium and solar wind pressures balance. The crossing of the heliopause should be signaled by a sharp drop in the temperature of solar wind-charged particles,[30] a change in the direction of the magnetic field, and an increase in the number of galactic cosmic rays.[34]

In May 2012, Voyager 1 detected a rapid increase in such cosmic rays (a 9% increase in a month, following a more gradual increase of 25% from Jan. 2009 to Jan. 2012), suggesting it was approaching the heliopause.[34] Between late August and early September 2012, Voyager 1 witnessed a sharp drop in protons from the sun, from 25 particles per second in late August, to about 2 particles per second by early October.[35] In September 2013, NASA announced that Voyager 1 had crossed the heliopause as of 25 August 2012.[36] This was at a distance of 121 AU (1.81×1010 km) from the Sun.[37] Contrary to predictions, data from Voyager 1 indicates the magnetic field of the galaxy is aligned with the solar magnetic field.[38]

On November 5, 2018, the Voyager 2 mission detected a sudden decrease in the flux of low-energy ions. At the same time, the level of cosmic rays increased. This demonstrated that the spacecraft crossed the heliopause at a distance of 119 AU (1.78×1010 km) from the Sun. Unlike Voyager 1, the Voyager 2 spacecraft did not detect interstellar flux tubes while crossing the heliosheath.[39]

NASA collected data from the heliopause during the SHIELDS mission in 2021.[40]

Heliotail edit

The heliotail is the tail of the heliosphere, and thus the Solar System's tail. It can be compared to the tail of a comet (however, a comet's tail does not stretch behind it as it moves; it is always pointing away from the Sun). The tail is a region where the Sun's solar wind slows down and ultimately escapes the heliosphere, slowly evaporating because of charge exchange.[41] The shape of the heliotail (newly found by NASA's Interstellar Boundary Explorer – IBEX), is that of a four-leaf clover.[42] The particles in the tail do not shine, therefore it cannot be seen with conventional optical instruments. IBEX made the first observations of the heliotail by measuring the energy of "energetic neutral atoms", neutral particles created by collisions in the Solar System's boundary zone.[42]

The tail has been shown to contain fast and slow particles; the slow particles are on the side and the fast particles are encompassed in the center. The shape of the tail can be linked to the Sun sending out fast solar winds near its poles and slow solar winds near its equator more recently. The clover-shaped tail moves further away from the Sun, which makes the charged particles begin to morph into a new orientation.

Cassini and IBEX data challenged the "heliotail" theory in 2009.[12][13] In July 2013, IBEX results revealed a 4-lobed tail on the Solar System's heliosphere.[43]

 
The bubble-like heliosphere moving through the interstellar medium.
 
ENA detection is more concentrated in one direction.[44].

Outside structures edit

The heliopause is the final known boundary between the heliosphere and the interstellar space that is filled with material, especially plasma, not from the Earth's own star, the Sun, but from other stars.[45] Even so, just outside the heliosphere (i.e. the "solar bubble") there is a transitional region, as detected by Voyager 1.[46] Just as some interstellar pressure was detected as early as 2004, some of the Sun's material seeps into the interstellar medium.[46] The heliosphere is thought to reside in the Local Interstellar Cloud inside the Local Bubble, which is a region in the Orion Arm of the Milky Way Galaxy.

Outside the heliosphere, there is a forty-fold increase in plasma density.[46] There is also a radical reduction in the detection of certain types of particles from the Sun, and a large increase in galactic cosmic rays.[47]

The flow of the interstellar medium (ISM) into the heliosphere has been measured by at least 11 different spacecraft as of 2013.[48] By 2013, it was suspected that the direction of the flow had changed over time.[48] The flow, coming from Earth's perspective from the constellation Scorpius, has probably changed direction by several degrees since the 1970s.[48]

Hydrogen wall edit

Predicted to be a region of hot hydrogen, a structure called the "hydrogen wall" may be between the bow shock and the heliopause.[49] The wall is composed of interstellar material interacting with the edge of the heliosphere. One paper released in 2013 studied the concept of a bow wave and hydrogen wall.[50]

Another hypothesis suggests that the heliopause could be smaller on the side of the Solar System facing the Sun's orbital motion through the galaxy. It may also vary depending on the current velocity of the solar wind and the local density of the interstellar medium. It is known to lie far outside the orbit of Neptune. The mission of the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft is to find and study the termination shock, heliosheath, and heliopause. Meanwhile, the IBEX mission is attempting to image the heliopause from Earth orbit within two years of its 2008 launch. Initial results (October 2009) from IBEX suggest that previous assumptions are insufficiently cognisant of the true complexities of the heliopause.[51]

In August 2018, long-term studies about the hydrogen wall by the New Horizons spacecraft confirmed results first detected in 1992 by the two Voyager spacecraft.[52][53] Although the hydrogen is detected by extra ultraviolet light (which may come from another source), the detection by New Horizons corroborates the earlier detections by Voyager at a much higher level of sensitivity.[54]

Bow shock edit

It was long hypothesized that the Sun produces a "shock wave" in its travels within the interstellar medium. It would occur if the interstellar medium is moving supersonically "toward" the Sun, since its solar wind moves "away" from the Sun supersonically. When the interstellar wind hits the heliosphere it slows and creates a region of turbulence. A bow shock was thought to possibly occur at about 230 AU,[16] but in 2012 it was determined it probably does not exist.[15] This conclusion resulted from new measurements: The velocity of the LISM (local interstellar medium) relative to the Sun's was previously measured to be 26.3 km/s by Ulysses, whereas IBEX measured it at 23.2 km/s.[55]

This phenomenon has been observed outside the Solar System, around stars other than the Sun, by NASA's now retired orbital GALEX telescope. The red giant star Mira in the constellation Cetus has been shown to have both a debris tail of ejecta from the star and a distinct shock in the direction of its movement through space (at over 130 kilometers per second).

Observational methods edit

 
Pioneer H, on display at the National Air and Space Museum, was a canceled probe to study the Sun.[56]

Detection by spacecraft edit

The precise distance to and shape of the heliopause are still uncertain. Interplanetary/interstellar spacecraft such as Pioneer 10, Pioneer 11 and New Horizons are traveling outward through the Solar System and will eventually pass through the heliopause. Contact to Pioneer 10 and 11 has been lost.

Cassini results edit

Rather than a comet-like shape, the heliosphere appears to be bubble-shaped according to data from Cassini's Ion and Neutral Camera (MIMI / INCA). Rather than being dominated by the collisions between the solar wind and the interstellar medium, the INCA (ENA) maps suggest that the interaction is controlled more by particle pressure and magnetic field energy density.[12][57]

IBEX results edit

 
IBEX heliosphere map.

Initial data from Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX), launched in October 2008, revealed a previously unpredicted "very narrow ribbon that is two to three times brighter than anything else in the sky."[13] Initial interpretations suggest that "the interstellar environment has far more influence on structuring the heliosphere than anyone previously believed"[58] "No one knows what is creating the ENA (energetic neutral atoms) ribbon, ..."[59]

"The IBEX results are truly remarkable! What we are seeing in these maps does not match with any of the previous theoretical models of this region. It will be exciting for scientists to review these (ENA) maps and revise the way we understand our heliosphere and how it interacts with the galaxy."[60] In October 2010, significant changes were detected in the ribbon after 6 months, based on the second set of IBEX observations.[61] IBEX data did not support the existence of a bow shock,[15] but there might be a 'bow wave' according to one study.[50]

Locally edit

 
Overview of heliophysics spacecraft circa 2011.

Examples of missions that have or continue to collect data related to the heliosphere include:

During a total eclipse the high-temperature corona can be more readily observed from Earth solar observatories. During the Apollo program the Solar wind was measured on the Moon via the Solar Wind Composition Experiment. Some examples of Earth surface based Solar observatories include the McMath–Pierce solar telescope or the newer GREGOR Solar Telescope, and the refurbished Big Bear Solar Observatory.

Exploration history edit

 
Energetic neutral atoms map by IBEX. Credit: NASA / Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio.
 
Graphs of heliosheath detections by Voyager 1 and Voyager 2. Voyager 2 has since crossed the heliopause into interstellar space.
 
Voyager 1 and 2 speed and distance from Sun

The heliosphere is the area under the influence of the Sun; the two major components to determining its edge are the heliospheric magnetic field and the solar wind from the Sun. Three major sections from the beginning of the heliosphere to its edge are the termination shock, the heliosheath, and the heliopause. Five spacecraft have returned much of the data about its furthest reaches, including Pioneer 10 (1972–1997; data to 67 AU), Pioneer 11 (1973–1995; 44 AU), Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 (launched 1977, ongoing), and New Horizons (launched 2006). A type of particle called an energetic neutral atom (ENA) has also been observed to have been produced from its edges.

Except for regions near obstacles such as planets or comets, the heliosphere is dominated by material emanating from the Sun, although cosmic rays, fast-moving neutral atoms, and cosmic dust can penetrate the heliosphere from the outside. Originating at the extremely hot surface of the corona, solar wind particles reach escape velocity, streaming outwards at 300 to 800 km/s (671 thousand to 1.79 million mph or 1 to 2.9 million km/h).[62] As it begins to interact with the interstellar medium, its velocity slows to a stop. The point where the solar wind becomes slower than the speed of sound is called the termination shock; the solar wind continues to slow as it passes through the heliosheath leading to a boundary called the heliopause, where the interstellar medium and solar wind pressures balance. The termination shock was traversed by Voyager 1 in 2004,[33] and Voyager 2 in 2007.[5]

It was thought that beyond the heliopause there was a bow shock, but data from Interstellar Boundary Explorer suggested the velocity of the Sun through the interstellar medium is too low for it to form.[15] It may be a more gentle "bow wave".[50]

Voyager data led to a new theory that the heliosheath has "magnetic bubbles" and a stagnation zone.[28][63] Also, there were reports of a "stagnation region" within the heliosheath, starting around 113 au (1.69×1010 km; 1.05×1010 mi), detected by Voyager 1 in 2010.[28] There, the solar wind velocity drops to zero, the magnetic field intensity doubles, and high-energy electrons from the galaxy increase 100-fold.[28]

Starting in May 2012 at 120 au (1.8×1010 km; 1.1×1010 mi), Voyager 1 detected a sudden increase in cosmic rays, an apparent sign of approach to the heliopause.[34] In the summer of 2013, NASA announced that Voyager 1 had reached interstellar space as of 25 August 2012.[36]

In December 2012, NASA announced that in late August 2012, Voyager 1, at about 122 au (1.83×1010 km; 1.13×1010 mi) from the Sun, entered a new region they called the "magnetic highway", an area still under the influence of the Sun but with some dramatic differences.[33]

Pioneer 10 was launched in March 1972, and within 10 hours passed by the Moon; over the next 35 years or so the mission would be the first out, laying out many firsts of discoveries about the nature of heliosphere as well as Jupiter's impact on it.[64] Pioneer 10 was the first spacecraft to detect sodium and aluminum ions in the solar wind, as well as helium in the inner Solar System.[64] In November 1972, Pioneer 10 encountered Jupiter's enormous (compared to Earth) magnetosphere and would pass in and out of it and its heliosphere 17 times charting its interaction with the solar wind.[64] Pioneer 10 returned scientific data until March 1997, including data on the solar wind out to about 67 AU.[65] It was also contacted in 2003 when it was a distance of 7.6 billion miles from Earth (82 AU), but no instrument data about the solar wind was returned then.[66][67]

Voyager 1 surpassed the radial distance from the Sun of Pioneer 10 at 69.4 AU on 17 February 1998, because it was traveling faster, gaining about 1.02 AU per year.[68] On July 18, 2023, Voyager 2 overtook Pioneer 10 as the second most distant human-made object from the Sun.[69] Pioneer 11, launched a year after Pioneer 10, took similar data as Pioneer out to 44.7 AU in 1995 when that mission was concluded.[67] Pioneer 11 had a similar instrument suite as 10 but also had a flux-gate magnetometer.[68] Pioneer and Voyager spacecraft were on different trajectories and thus recorded data on the heliosphere in different overall directions away from the Sun.[67] Data obtained from Pioneer and Voyager spacecraft helped corroborate the detection of a hydrogen wall.[70]

Voyagers 1 and 2 were launched in 1977 and operated continuously to at least the late 2010s, and encountered various aspects of the heliosphere past Pluto.[71] In 2012 Voyager 1 is thought to have passed through heliopause, and Voyager 2 did the same in 2018[71][72]

The twin Voyagers are the only man-made objects to have entered interstellar space. However, while they have left the heliosphere, they have not yet left the boundary of the Solar System which is considered to be the outer edge of the Oort Cloud.[72] Upon passing the heliopause, Voyager 2's Plasma Science Experiment (PLS) observed a sharp decline in the speed of solar wind particles on 5 November and there has been no sign of it since. The three other instruments on board measuring cosmic rays, low-energy charged particles, and magnetic fields also recorded the transition.[73] The observations complement data from NASA's IBEX mission. NASA is also preparing an additional mission, Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) which is due to launch in 2024 to capitalise on Voyager's observations.[72]

Timeline of exploration and detection edit

  • 1904: The Potsdam Great Refractor with a spectrograph detects interstellar medium.[74] The binary star Mintaka in Orionis determined to have the element calcium in the intervening space.[74]
  • January 1959: Luna 1 becomes the first spacecraft to observe the solar wind.[75]
  • 1962: Mariner 2 detects the solar wind.[76]
  • 1972–1973: Pioneer 10 becomes the first spacecraft to explore the heliosphere past Mars, flying by Jupiter on 4 December 1973 and continuing to return solar wind data out to a distance of 67 AU.[67]
  • February 1992: After flying by Jupiter, the Ulysses spacecraft becomes the first to explore the mid and high latitudes of the heliosphere.[77]
  • 1992: Pioneer and Voyager probes detected Ly-α radiation resonantly scattered by heliospheric hydrogen.[70]
  • 2004: Voyager 1 becomes the first spacecraft to reach the termination shock.[33]
  • 2005: SOHO observations of the solar wind show that the shape of the heliosphere is not axisymmetrical, but distorted, very likely under the effect of the local galactic magnetic field.[78]
  • 2009: IBEX project scientists discover and map a ribbon-shaped region of intense energetic neutral atom emission. These neutral atoms are thought to be originating from the heliopause.[13]
  • October 2009: the heliosphere may be bubble, not comet shaped.[12]
  • October 2010: significant changes were detected in the ribbon after six months, based on the second set of IBEX observations.[61]
  • May 2012: IBEX data implies there is probably not a bow "shock".[15]
  • June 2012: At 119 AU, Voyager 1 detected an increase in cosmic rays.[34]
  • 25 August 2012: Voyager 1 crosses the heliopause, becoming the first human-made object to depart the heliosphere.[3]
  • August 2018: long-term studies about the hydrogen wall by the New Horizons spacecraft confirmed results first detected in 1992 by the two Voyager spacecraft.[52][53]
  • 5 November 2018: Voyager 2 crosses the heliopause, departing the heliosphere.[4]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Schwadron, N. A.; et al. (6 September 2011). "Does the Space Environment Affect the Ecosphere?". Eos. 92 (36): 297–301. Bibcode:2011EOSTr..92..297S. doi:10.1029/2011eo360001.
  • Universe Today this-is-what-the-solar-system-really-looks-like

External links edit

  • Voyager Interstellar Mission Objectives
  • NASA GALEX (Galaxy evolution Explorer) homepage at Caltech
  • A Big Surprise from the Edge of the Solar System (NASA 06.09.11)

heliosphere, this, article, about, astrosphere, astrospheres, other, stars, stellar, wind, bubble, other, uses, disambiguation, heliosphere, magnetosphere, astrosphere, outermost, atmospheric, layer, takes, shape, vast, tailed, bubble, like, region, space, pla. This article is about the Sun s astrosphere For astrospheres of other stars see Stellar wind bubble For other uses see Heliosphere disambiguation The heliosphere is the magnetosphere astrosphere and outermost atmospheric layer of the Sun It takes the shape of a vast tailed bubble like region of space In plasma physics terms it is the cavity formed by the Sun in the surrounding interstellar medium The bubble of the heliosphere is continuously inflated by plasma originating from the Sun known as the solar wind Outside the heliosphere this solar plasma gives way to the interstellar plasma permeating the Milky Way As part of the interplanetary magnetic field the heliosphere shields the Solar System from significant amounts of cosmic ionizing radiation uncharged gamma rays are however not affected 1 Its name was likely coined by Alexander J Dessler who is credited with the first use of the word in the scientific literature in 1967 2 The scientific study of the heliosphere is heliophysics which includes space weather and space climate Top Diagram of the heliosphere as it travels through the interstellar medium Heliosheath the outer region of the heliosphere the solar wind is compressed and turbulentHeliopause the boundary between the solar wind and interstellar wind where they are in equilibrium Middle water running into a sink as an analogy for the heliosphere and its different zones left and Voyager spacecraft measuring a drop of the solar wind s high energy particles at the termination shock right Bottom Logarithmic scale of the Solar System and Voyager 1 s position Gliese 445 on the far right by way of contrast is approximately 10 000 times further from the Sun than Voyager Flowing unimpeded through the Solar System for billions of kilometers the solar wind extends far beyond even the region of Pluto until it encounters the termination shock where its motion slows abruptly due to the outside pressure of the interstellar medium The heliosheath is a broad transitional region between the termination shock and the heliosphere s outmost edge the heliopause The overall shape of the heliosphere resembles that of a comet being roughly spherical on one side with a long trailing tail opposite known as heliotail Two Voyager program spacecraft explored the outer reaches of the heliosphere passing through the termination shock and the heliosheath Voyager 1 encountered heliopause on 25 August 2012 when the spacecraft measured a forty fold sudden increase in plasma density 3 Voyager 2 traversed the heliopause on 5 November 2018 4 Because heliopause marks the boundary between matter originating from the Sun and matter originating from the rest of the galaxy spacecraft that depart the heliosphere such as the two Voyagers are in interstellar space Contents 1 Structure 1 1 Solar wind 1 2 Heliospheric current sheet 2 Edge structure 2 1 Termination shock 2 2 Heliosheath 2 3 Heliopause 2 4 Heliotail 3 Outside structures 3 1 Hydrogen wall 3 2 Bow shock 4 Observational methods 4 1 Detection by spacecraft 4 1 1 Cassini results 4 1 2 IBEX results 4 2 Locally 5 Exploration history 6 Timeline of exploration and detection 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksStructure edit nbsp The Sun photographed at a wavelength of 19 3 nanometers ultraviolet Despite its name the heliosphere s shape is not a perfect sphere 5 Its shape is determined by three factors the interstellar medium ISM the solar wind and the overall motion of the Sun and heliosphere as it passes through the ISM Because the solar wind and the ISM are both fluids the heliosphere s shape and size are also fluid Changes in the solar wind however more strongly alter the fluctuating position of the boundaries on short timescales hours to a few years The solar wind s pressure varies far more rapidly than the outside pressure of the ISM at any given location In particular the effect of the 11 year solar cycle which sees a distinct maximum and minimum of solar wind activity is thought to be significant On a broader scale the motion of the heliosphere through the fluid medium of the ISM results in an overall comet like shape The solar wind plasma which is moving roughly upstream in the same direction as the Sun s motion through the galaxy is compressed into a nearly spherical form whereas the plasma moving downstream opposite the Sun s motion flows out for a much greater distance before giving way to the ISM defining the long trailing shape of the heliotail The limited data available and the unexplored nature of these structures have resulted in many theories as to their form 6 In 2020 Merav Opher led the team of researchers who determined that the shape of the heliosphere is a crescent 7 that can be described as a deflated croissant 8 9 Solar wind edit Main articles Solar wind and Interplanetary medium The solar wind consists of particles ionized atoms from the solar corona and fields like the magnetic field that are produced from the Sun and stream out into space Because the Sun rotates once approximately every 25 days the heliospheric magnetic field 10 transported by the solar wind gets wrapped into a spiral The solar wind affects many other systems in the Solar System for example variations in the Sun s own magnetic field are carried outward by the solar wind producing geomagnetic storms in the Earth s magnetosphere nbsp The heliospheric current sheet out to the orbit of JupiterHeliospheric current sheet edit Main article Heliospheric current sheet The heliospheric current sheet is a ripple in the heliosphere created by the rotating magnetic field of the Sun It marks the boundary between heliospheric magnetic field regions of opposite polarity Extending throughout the heliosphere the heliospheric current sheet could be considered the largest structure in the Solar System and is said to resemble a ballerina s skirt 11 Edge structure editThe outer structure of the heliosphere is determined by the interactions between the solar wind and the winds of interstellar space The solar wind streams away from the Sun in all directions at speeds of several hundred km s in the Earth s vicinity At some distance from the Sun well beyond the orbit of Neptune this supersonic wind must slow down to meet the gases in the interstellar medium This takes place in several stages The solar wind is traveling at supersonic speeds within the Solar System At the termination shock a standing shock wave the solar wind falls below the speed of sound and becomes subsonic It was previously thought that once subsonic the solar wind would be shaped by the ambient flow of the interstellar medium forming a blunt nose on one side and comet like heliotail behind a region called the heliosheath However observations in 2009 showed that this model is incorrect 12 13 As of 2011 it is thought to be filled with a magnetic bubble foam 14 The outer surface of the heliosheath where the heliosphere meets the interstellar medium is called heliopause This is the edge of the entire heliosphere Observations in 2009 led to changes to this model 12 13 In theory heliopause causes turbulence in the interstellar medium as the Sun orbits the Galactic Center Outside the heliopause would be a turbulent region caused by the pressure of the advancing heliopause against the interstellar medium However the velocity of the solar wind relative to the interstellar medium is probably too low for a bow shock 15 Termination shock edit Termination shock redirects here For the book by Neal Stephenson see Termination Shock novel This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2019 nbsp A termination shock analogy of water in a sink basin The termination shock is the point in the heliosphere where the solar wind slows down to subsonic speed relative to the Sun because of interactions with the local interstellar medium This causes compression heating and a change in the magnetic field In the Solar System the termination shock is believed to be 75 to 90 astronomical units 16 from the Sun In 2004 Voyager 1 crossed the Sun s termination shock followed by Voyager 2 in 2007 3 5 17 18 19 20 21 22 The shock arises because solar wind particles are emitted from the Sun at about 400 km s while the speed of sound in the interstellar medium is about 100 km s The exact speed depends on the density which fluctuates considerably For comparison the Earth orbits the Sun at about 30 km s the ISS orbits the Earth at about 7 7 km s airliners fly over the ground at about 0 2 0 3 km s a car on a typical limited access highway achieves about 0 03 km s and humans walk around 0 001 km s The interstellar medium although very low in density nonetheless has a relatively constant pressure associated with it the pressure from the solar wind decreases with the square of the distance from the Sun As one moves far enough away from the Sun the pressure of the solar wind drops to where it can no longer maintain supersonic flow against the pressure of the interstellar medium at which point the solar wind slows to below its speed of sound causing a shock wave Further from the Sun the termination shock is followed by heliopause where the two pressures become equal and solar wind particles are stopped by the interstellar medium Other termination shocks can be seen in terrestrial systems perhaps the easiest may be seen by simply running a water tap into a sink creating a hydraulic jump Upon hitting the floor of the sink the flowing water spreads out at a speed that is higher than the local wave speed forming a disk of shallow rapidly diverging flow analogous to the tenuous supersonic solar wind Around the periphery of the disk a shock front or wall of water forms outside the shock front the water moves slower than the local wave speed analogous to the subsonic interstellar medium Evidence presented at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union in May 2005 by Ed Stone suggests that the Voyager 1 spacecraft passed the termination shock in December 2004 when it was about 94 AU from the Sun by virtue of the change in magnetic readings taken from the craft In contrast Voyager 2 began detecting returning particles when it was only 76 AU from the Sun in May 2006 This implies that the heliosphere may be irregularly shaped bulging outwards in the Sun s northern hemisphere and pushed inward in the south 23 nbsp Illustration of the heliosphere as released on 28 June 2013 which incorporates results from the Voyager spacecraft 24 The heliosheath is between the termination shock and the heliopause Heliosheath edit The heliosheath is the region of the heliosphere beyond the termination shock Here the wind is slowed compressed and made turbulent by its interaction with the interstellar medium At its closest point the inner edge of the heliosheath lies approximately 80 to 100 AU from the Sun A proposed model hypothesizes that the heliosheath is shaped like the coma of a comet and trails several times that distance in the direction opposite to the Sun s path through space At its windward side its thickness is estimated to be between 10 and 100 AU 25 Voyager project scientists have determined that the heliosheath is not smooth it is rather a foamy zone filled with magnetic bubbles each about 1 AU wide 14 These magnetic bubbles are created by the impact of the solar wind and the interstellar medium 26 27 Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 began detecting evidence of the bubbles in 2007 and 2008 respectively The probably sausage shaped bubbles are formed by magnetic reconnection between oppositely oriented sectors of the solar magnetic field as the solar wind slows down They probably represent self contained structures that have detached from the interplanetary magnetic field At a distance of about 113 AU Voyager 1 detected a stagnation region within the heliosheath 28 In this region the solar wind slowed to zero 29 30 31 32 the magnetic field intensity doubled and high energy electrons from the galaxy increased 100 fold At about 122 AU the spacecraft entered a new region that Voyager project scientists called the magnetic highway an area still under the influence of the Sun but with some dramatic differences 33 Heliopause edit The heliopause is the theoretical boundary where the Sun s solar wind is stopped by the interstellar medium where the solar wind s strength is no longer great enough to push back the stellar winds of the surrounding stars This is the boundary where the interstellar medium and solar wind pressures balance The crossing of the heliopause should be signaled by a sharp drop in the temperature of solar wind charged particles 30 a change in the direction of the magnetic field and an increase in the number of galactic cosmic rays 34 In May 2012 Voyager 1 detected a rapid increase in such cosmic rays a 9 increase in a month following a more gradual increase of 25 from Jan 2009 to Jan 2012 suggesting it was approaching the heliopause 34 Between late August and early September 2012 Voyager 1 witnessed a sharp drop in protons from the sun from 25 particles per second in late August to about 2 particles per second by early October 35 In September 2013 NASA announced that Voyager 1 had crossed the heliopause as of 25 August 2012 36 This was at a distance of 121 AU 1 81 1010 km from the Sun 37 Contrary to predictions data from Voyager 1 indicates the magnetic field of the galaxy is aligned with the solar magnetic field 38 On November 5 2018 the Voyager 2 mission detected a sudden decrease in the flux of low energy ions At the same time the level of cosmic rays increased This demonstrated that the spacecraft crossed the heliopause at a distance of 119 AU 1 78 1010 km from the Sun Unlike Voyager 1 the Voyager 2 spacecraft did not detect interstellar flux tubes while crossing the heliosheath 39 NASA collected data from the heliopause during the SHIELDS mission in 2021 40 Heliotail edit The heliotail is the tail of the heliosphere and thus the Solar System s tail It can be compared to the tail of a comet however a comet s tail does not stretch behind it as it moves it is always pointing away from the Sun The tail is a region where the Sun s solar wind slows down and ultimately escapes the heliosphere slowly evaporating because of charge exchange 41 The shape of the heliotail newly found by NASA s Interstellar Boundary Explorer IBEX is that of a four leaf clover 42 The particles in the tail do not shine therefore it cannot be seen with conventional optical instruments IBEX made the first observations of the heliotail by measuring the energy of energetic neutral atoms neutral particles created by collisions in the Solar System s boundary zone 42 The tail has been shown to contain fast and slow particles the slow particles are on the side and the fast particles are encompassed in the center The shape of the tail can be linked to the Sun sending out fast solar winds near its poles and slow solar winds near its equator more recently The clover shaped tail moves further away from the Sun which makes the charged particles begin to morph into a new orientation Cassini and IBEX data challenged the heliotail theory in 2009 12 13 In July 2013 IBEX results revealed a 4 lobed tail on the Solar System s heliosphere 43 nbsp The bubble like heliosphere moving through the interstellar medium nbsp ENA detection is more concentrated in one direction 44 Outside structures editThe heliopause is the final known boundary between the heliosphere and the interstellar space that is filled with material especially plasma not from the Earth s own star the Sun but from other stars 45 Even so just outside the heliosphere i e the solar bubble there is a transitional region as detected by Voyager 1 46 Just as some interstellar pressure was detected as early as 2004 some of the Sun s material seeps into the interstellar medium 46 The heliosphere is thought to reside in the Local Interstellar Cloud inside the Local Bubble which is a region in the Orion Arm of the Milky Way Galaxy Outside the heliosphere there is a forty fold increase in plasma density 46 There is also a radical reduction in the detection of certain types of particles from the Sun and a large increase in galactic cosmic rays 47 The flow of the interstellar medium ISM into the heliosphere has been measured by at least 11 different spacecraft as of 2013 48 By 2013 it was suspected that the direction of the flow had changed over time 48 The flow coming from Earth s perspective from the constellation Scorpius has probably changed direction by several degrees since the 1970s 48 Hydrogen wall edit Hydrogen wall redirects here For other topics see Hydrogen disambiguation This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2019 Predicted to be a region of hot hydrogen a structure called the hydrogen wall may be between the bow shock and the heliopause 49 The wall is composed of interstellar material interacting with the edge of the heliosphere One paper released in 2013 studied the concept of a bow wave and hydrogen wall 50 Another hypothesis suggests that the heliopause could be smaller on the side of the Solar System facing the Sun s orbital motion through the galaxy It may also vary depending on the current velocity of the solar wind and the local density of the interstellar medium It is known to lie far outside the orbit of Neptune The mission of the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft is to find and study the termination shock heliosheath and heliopause Meanwhile the IBEX mission is attempting to image the heliopause from Earth orbit within two years of its 2008 launch Initial results October 2009 from IBEX suggest that previous assumptions are insufficiently cognisant of the true complexities of the heliopause 51 In August 2018 long term studies about the hydrogen wall by the New Horizons spacecraft confirmed results first detected in 1992 by the two Voyager spacecraft 52 53 Although the hydrogen is detected by extra ultraviolet light which may come from another source the detection by New Horizons corroborates the earlier detections by Voyager at a much higher level of sensitivity 54 Bow shock edit Further information Bow shock It was long hypothesized that the Sun produces a shock wave in its travels within the interstellar medium It would occur if the interstellar medium is moving supersonically toward the Sun since its solar wind moves away from the Sun supersonically When the interstellar wind hits the heliosphere it slows and creates a region of turbulence A bow shock was thought to possibly occur at about 230 AU 16 but in 2012 it was determined it probably does not exist 15 This conclusion resulted from new measurements The velocity of the LISM local interstellar medium relative to the Sun s was previously measured to be 26 3 km s by Ulysses whereas IBEX measured it at 23 2 km s 55 This phenomenon has been observed outside the Solar System around stars other than the Sun by NASA s now retired orbital GALEX telescope The red giant star Mira in the constellation Cetus has been shown to have both a debris tail of ejecta from the star and a distinct shock in the direction of its movement through space at over 130 kilometers per second Observational methods edit nbsp Pioneer H on display at the National Air and Space Museum was a canceled probe to study the Sun 56 Detection by spacecraft edit The precise distance to and shape of the heliopause are still uncertain Interplanetary interstellar spacecraft such as Pioneer 10 Pioneer 11 and New Horizons are traveling outward through the Solar System and will eventually pass through the heliopause Contact to Pioneer 10 and 11 has been lost Cassini results edit Rather than a comet like shape the heliosphere appears to be bubble shaped according to data from Cassini s Ion and Neutral Camera MIMI INCA Rather than being dominated by the collisions between the solar wind and the interstellar medium the INCA ENA maps suggest that the interaction is controlled more by particle pressure and magnetic field energy density 12 57 IBEX results edit nbsp IBEX heliosphere map Initial data from Interstellar Boundary Explorer IBEX launched in October 2008 revealed a previously unpredicted very narrow ribbon that is two to three times brighter than anything else in the sky 13 Initial interpretations suggest that the interstellar environment has far more influence on structuring the heliosphere than anyone previously believed 58 No one knows what is creating the ENA energetic neutral atoms ribbon 59 The IBEX results are truly remarkable What we are seeing in these maps does not match with any of the previous theoretical models of this region It will be exciting for scientists to review these ENA maps and revise the way we understand our heliosphere and how it interacts with the galaxy 60 In October 2010 significant changes were detected in the ribbon after 6 months based on the second set of IBEX observations 61 IBEX data did not support the existence of a bow shock 15 but there might be a bow wave according to one study 50 Locally edit See also List of heliophysics missions nbsp Overview of heliophysics spacecraft circa 2011 Examples of missions that have or continue to collect data related to the heliosphere include Solar Anomalous and Magnetospheric Particle Explorer Solar and Heliospheric Observatory Solar Dynamics Observatory STEREO Ulysses spacecraft Parker Solar ProbeDuring a total eclipse the high temperature corona can be more readily observed from Earth solar observatories During the Apollo program the Solar wind was measured on the Moon via the Solar Wind Composition Experiment Some examples of Earth surface based Solar observatories include the McMath Pierce solar telescope or the newer GREGOR Solar Telescope and the refurbished Big Bear Solar Observatory Exploration history edit nbsp Energetic neutral atoms map by IBEX Credit NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio nbsp Graphs of heliosheath detections by Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 Voyager 2 has since crossed the heliopause into interstellar space nbsp Voyager 1 and 2 speed and distance from SunThe heliosphere is the area under the influence of the Sun the two major components to determining its edge are the heliospheric magnetic field and the solar wind from the Sun Three major sections from the beginning of the heliosphere to its edge are the termination shock the heliosheath and the heliopause Five spacecraft have returned much of the data about its furthest reaches including Pioneer 10 1972 1997 data to 67 AU Pioneer 11 1973 1995 44 AU Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 launched 1977 ongoing and New Horizons launched 2006 A type of particle called an energetic neutral atom ENA has also been observed to have been produced from its edges Except for regions near obstacles such as planets or comets the heliosphere is dominated by material emanating from the Sun although cosmic rays fast moving neutral atoms and cosmic dust can penetrate the heliosphere from the outside Originating at the extremely hot surface of the corona solar wind particles reach escape velocity streaming outwards at 300 to 800 km s 671 thousand to 1 79 million mph or 1 to 2 9 million km h 62 As it begins to interact with the interstellar medium its velocity slows to a stop The point where the solar wind becomes slower than the speed of sound is called the termination shock the solar wind continues to slow as it passes through the heliosheath leading to a boundary called the heliopause where the interstellar medium and solar wind pressures balance The termination shock was traversed by Voyager 1 in 2004 33 and Voyager 2 in 2007 5 It was thought that beyond the heliopause there was a bow shock but data from Interstellar Boundary Explorer suggested the velocity of the Sun through the interstellar medium is too low for it to form 15 It may be a more gentle bow wave 50 Voyager data led to a new theory that the heliosheath has magnetic bubbles and a stagnation zone 28 63 Also there were reports of a stagnation region within the heliosheath starting around 113 au 1 69 1010 km 1 05 1010 mi detected by Voyager 1 in 2010 28 There the solar wind velocity drops to zero the magnetic field intensity doubles and high energy electrons from the galaxy increase 100 fold 28 Starting in May 2012 at 120 au 1 8 1010 km 1 1 1010 mi Voyager 1 detected a sudden increase in cosmic rays an apparent sign of approach to the heliopause 34 In the summer of 2013 NASA announced thatVoyager 1 had reached interstellar space as of 25 August 2012 36 In December 2012 NASA announced that in late August 2012 Voyager 1 at about 122 au 1 83 1010 km 1 13 1010 mi from the Sun entered a new region they called the magnetic highway an area still under the influence of the Sun but with some dramatic differences 33 Pioneer 10 was launched in March 1972 and within 10 hours passed by the Moon over the next 35 years or so the mission would be the first out laying out many firsts of discoveries about the nature of heliosphere as well as Jupiter s impact on it 64 Pioneer 10 was the first spacecraft to detect sodium and aluminum ions in the solar wind as well as helium in the inner Solar System 64 In November 1972 Pioneer 10 encountered Jupiter s enormous compared to Earth magnetosphere and would pass in and out of it and its heliosphere 17 times charting its interaction with the solar wind 64 Pioneer 10 returned scientific data until March 1997 including data on the solar wind out to about 67 AU 65 It was also contacted in 2003 when it was a distance of 7 6 billion miles from Earth 82 AU but no instrument data about the solar wind was returned then 66 67 Voyager 1 surpassed the radial distance from the Sun of Pioneer 10 at 69 4 AU on 17 February 1998 because it was traveling faster gaining about 1 02 AU per year 68 On July 18 2023 Voyager 2 overtook Pioneer 10 as the second most distant human made object from the Sun 69 Pioneer 11 launched a year after Pioneer 10 took similar data as Pioneer out to 44 7 AU in 1995 when that mission was concluded 67 Pioneer 11 had a similar instrument suite as 10 but also had a flux gate magnetometer 68 Pioneer and Voyager spacecraft were on different trajectories and thus recorded data on the heliosphere in different overall directions away from the Sun 67 Data obtained from Pioneer and Voyager spacecraft helped corroborate the detection of a hydrogen wall 70 Voyagers 1 and 2 were launched in 1977 and operated continuously to at least the late 2010s and encountered various aspects of the heliosphere past Pluto 71 In 2012 Voyager 1 is thought to have passed through heliopause and Voyager 2 did the same in 2018 71 72 The twin Voyagers are the only man made objects to have entered interstellar space However while they have left the heliosphere they have not yet left the boundary of the Solar System which is considered to be the outer edge of the Oort Cloud 72 Upon passing the heliopause Voyager 2 s Plasma Science Experiment PLS observed a sharp decline in the speed of solar wind particles on 5 November and there has been no sign of it since The three other instruments on board measuring cosmic rays low energy charged particles and magnetic fields also recorded the transition 73 The observations complement data from NASA s IBEX mission NASA is also preparing an additional mission Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe IMAP which is due to launch in 2024 to capitalise on Voyager s observations 72 Timeline of exploration and detection edit1904 The Potsdam Great Refractor with a spectrograph detects interstellar medium 74 The binary star Mintaka in Orionis determined to have the element calcium in the intervening space 74 January 1959 Luna 1 becomes the first spacecraft to observe the solar wind 75 1962 Mariner 2 detects the solar wind 76 1972 1973 Pioneer 10 becomes the first spacecraft to explore the heliosphere past Mars flying by Jupiter on 4 December 1973 and continuing to return solar wind data out to a distance of 67 AU 67 February 1992 After flying by Jupiter the Ulysses spacecraft becomes the first to explore the mid and high latitudes of the heliosphere 77 1992 Pioneer and Voyager probes detected Ly a radiation resonantly scattered by heliospheric hydrogen 70 2004 Voyager 1 becomes the first spacecraft to reach the termination shock 33 2005 SOHO observations of the solar wind show that the shape of the heliosphere is not axisymmetrical but distorted very likely under the effect of the local galactic magnetic field 78 2009 IBEX project scientists discover and map a ribbon shaped region of intense energetic neutral atom emission These neutral atoms are thought to be originating from the heliopause 13 October 2009 the heliosphere may be bubble not comet shaped 12 October 2010 significant changes were detected in the ribbon after six months based on the second set of IBEX observations 61 May 2012 IBEX data implies there is probably not a bow shock 15 June 2012 At 119 AU Voyager 1 detected an increase in cosmic rays 34 25 August 2012 Voyager 1 crosses the heliopause becoming the first human made object to depart the heliosphere 3 August 2018 long term studies about the hydrogen wall by the New Horizons spacecraft confirmed results first detected in 1992 by the two Voyager spacecraft 52 53 5 November 2018 Voyager 2 crosses the heliopause departing the heliosphere 4 See also editCoronal mass ejection Fermi glowReferences edit Gale Martha 1 April 2013 The Sun s Heliosphere Alexander J Dessler February 1967 Solar wind and interplanetary magnetic field Reviews of Geophysics and Space Physics 5 1 1 41 Bibcode 1967RvGSP 5 1D doi 10 1029 RG005i001p00001 a b c NASA Spacecraft Embarks on Historic Journey Into Interstellar Space NASA 12 September 2013 Retrieved 8 March 2016 a b NASA s Voyager 2 Probe Enters Interstellar Space NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory 10 December 2018 Retrieved 14 December 2018 a b c Voyager 2 Proves Solar System Is Squashed NASA 10 December 2007 Retrieved 8 March 2016 J Matson 27 June 2013 Voyager 1 Returns Surprising Data about an Unexplored Region of Deep Space Scientific American Retrieved 8 March 2016 Opher Merav Loeb Abraham Drake James Toth Gabor 1 July 2020 A small and round heliosphere suggested by magnetohydrodynamic modelling of pick up ions Nature Astronomy 4 7 675 683 arXiv 1808 06611 Bibcode 2020NatAs 4 675O doi 10 1038 s41550 020 1036 0 ISSN 2397 3366 S2CID 216241125 Jean Celia Reich Aaron 9 August 2020 Solar system s heliosphere may be croissant shaped study The Jerusalem Post JPost com Retrieved 17 December 2021 Crowley James 11 August 2020 NASA says we all live inside a giant deflated croissant yes really Newsweek Retrieved 17 December 2021 Owens Mathew J Forsyth Robert J 28 November 2013 The Heliospheric Magnetic Field Living Reviews in Solar Physics 10 1 5 Bibcode 2013LRSP 10 5O doi 10 12942 lrsp 2013 5 ISSN 1614 4961 Mursula K Hiltula T 2003 Bashful ballerina Southward shifted heliospheric current sheet Geophysical Research Letters 30 22 2135 Bibcode 2003GeoRL 30 2135M doi 10 1029 2003GL018201 a b c d e Johns Hopkins University 18 October 2009 New View Of The Heliosphere Cassini Helps Redraw Shape Of Solar System ScienceDaily Retrieved 8 March 2016 a b c d e First IBEX Maps Reveal Fascinating Interactions Occurring At The Edge Of The Solar System 16 October 2009 Retrieved 8 March 2016 a b Zell Holly 7 June 2013 A Big Surprise from the Edge of the Solar System a b c d e New Interstellar Boundary Explorer data show heliosphere s long theorized bow shock does not exist Phys org 10 May 2012 Retrieved 8 March 2016 a b Nemiroff R Bonnell J eds 24 June 2002 The Sun s Heliosphere amp Heliopause Astronomy Picture of the Day NASA Retrieved 8 March 2016 MIT instrument finds surprises at solar system s edge Massachusetts Institute of Technology 10 December 2007 Retrieved 20 August 2010 Steigerwald Bill 24 May 2005 Voyager Enters Solar System s Final Frontier American Astronomical Society Retrieved 25 May 2007 Voyager 2 Proves Solar System Is Squashed Jet Propulsion Laboratory 10 December 2007 Archived from the original on 13 December 2007 Retrieved 25 May 2007 Donald A Gurnett 1 June 2005 Voyager Termination Shock Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Iowa Retrieved 6 February 2008 Celeste Biever 25 May 2005 Voyager 1 reaches the edge of the solar system New Scientist Retrieved 6 February 2008 David Shiga 10 December 2007 Voyager 2 probe reaches solar system boundary New Scientist Retrieved 6 February 2008 Than Ker 24 May 2006 Voyager II detects solar system s edge CNN Retrieved 25 May 2007 JPL NASA GOV Voyager The Interstellar Mission Archived from the original on 8 July 2013 Brandt Pontus 27 February 2 March 2007 Imaging of the Heliospheric Boundary PDF NASA Advisory Council Workshop on Science Associated with the Lunar Exploration Architecture White Papers Tempe Arizona Lunar and Planetary Institute Retrieved 25 May 2007 Cook J R 9 June 2011 NASA Probes Suggest Magnetic Bubbles Reside At Solar System Edge NASA JPL Retrieved 10 June 2011 Rayl A j s 12 June 2011 Voyager Discovers Possible Sea of Huge Turbulent Magnetic Bubbles at Solar System Edge The Planetary Society Archived from the original on 16 June 2011 Retrieved 13 June 2011 a b c d Zell Holly 5 December 2011 NASA s Voyager Hits New Region at Solar System Edge NASA Retrieved 5 September 2018 Amos Jonathan 14 December 2010 Voyager near Solar Systems edge BBC News Retrieved 10 December 2010 a b NASA s Voyager 1 Spacecraft Nearing Edge of the Solar System Space Com 13 December 2010 Retrieved 15 December 2010 Brumfiel G 15 June 2011 Voyager at the edge spacecraft finds unexpected calm at the boundary of Sun s bubble Nature doi 10 1038 news 2011 370 Krimigis S M Roelof E C Decker R B Hill M E 16 June 2011 Zero outward flow velocity for plasma in a heliosheath transition layer Nature 474 7351 359 361 Bibcode 2011Natur 474 359K doi 10 1038 nature10115 PMID 21677754 S2CID 4345662 a b c d NASA Voyager 1 Encounters New Region in Deep Space Jet Propulsion Laboratory a b c d NASA Data From NASA s Voyager 1 Point to Interstellar Future NASA 14 June 2012 Retrieved 5 September 2018 Voyager probes to leave solar system by 2016 NBCnews 30 April 2011 Retrieved 8 March 2016 a b Greicius Tony 5 May 2015 NASA Spacecraft Embarks on Historic Journey Into Interstellar Space Cowen R 2013 Voyager 1 has reached interstellar space Nature doi 10 1038 nature 2013 13735 S2CID 123728719 Vergano Dan 14 September 2013 Voyager 1 Leaves Solar System NASA Confirms National Geographic Archived from the original on 13 September 2013 Retrieved 9 February 2015 Stone E C Cummings A C Heikkila B C Lal Nand 2019 Cosmic ray measurements from Voyager 2 as it crossed into interstellar space Nature Astronomy 3 11 1013 1018 Bibcode 2019NatAs 3 1013S doi 10 1038 s41550 019 0928 3 S2CID 209962964 Hatfield Miles 15 April 2021 SHIELDS Up NASA Rocket to Survey Our Solar System s Windshield NASA Retrieved 18 December 2021 The NASA black Brant IX sounding rocket carried the payload to an apogee of 177 miles before descending by parachute and landing at White Sands Preliminary indications show that vehicle systems performed as planned and data was received The Unexpected Structure of the Heliotail Astrobiology 12 July 2013 a b Cole Steve NASA Satellite Provides First View of the Solar System s Tail Archived 23 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine NASA News Release 12 211 10 July 2013 Zell Holly 6 March 2015 IBEX Provides First View Of the Solar System s Tail NASA STEREO Creates First Images of the Solar System s Invisible Frontier Greicius Tony 11 September 2013 Voyager Glossary a b c Greicius Tony 5 May 2015 NASA Spacecraft Embarks on Historic Journey Into Interstellar Space How Do We Know When Voyager Reaches Interstellar Space Jet Propulsion Laboratory a b c Zell Holly 6 March 2015 Interstellar Wind Changed Direction Over 40 Years Wood B E Alexander W R Linsky J L 13 July 2006 The Properties of the Local Interstellar Medium and the Interaction of the Stellar Winds of epsilon Indi and lambda Andromedae with the Interstellar Environment American Astronomical Society Archived from the original on 14 June 2000 Retrieved 25 May 2007 a b c Zank G P Heerikhuisen J Wood B E Pogorelov N V Zirnstein E McComas D J 1 January 2013 Heliospheric Structure The Bow Wave and the Hydrogen Wall Astrophysical Journal 763 1 20 Bibcode 2013ApJ 763 20Z doi 10 1088 0004 637X 763 1 20 Palmer Jason 15 October 2009 BBC News article Retrieved 4 May 2010 a b Gladstone G Randall Pryor W R Stern S Alan Ennico Kimberly et al 7 August 2018 The Lyman a Sky Background as Observed by New Horizons Geophysical Research Letters 45 16 8022 8028 arXiv 1808 00400 Bibcode 2018GeoRL 45 8022G doi 10 1029 2018GL078808 S2CID 119395450 a b Letzter Rafi 9 August 2018 NASA Spotted a Vast 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Marshall Solar Physics solarscience msfc nasa gov NASA Voyager Conditions At Edge Of Solar System NASA 9 June 2011 Retrieved 5 September 2018 a b c Pioneer 10 first probe to leave the inner solar system amp precursor to Juno www NASASpaceFlight com 15 July 2017 Retrieved 12 October 2018 NASA Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11 www nasa gov Retrieved 12 October 2018 NASA Pioneer 10 Spacecraft Sends Last Signal www nasa gov Retrieved 12 October 2018 a b c d Pioneer 10 11 www astronautix com Archived from the original on 20 August 2016 Retrieved 12 October 2018 a b Administrator NASA Content 3 March 2015 The Pioneer Missions NASA Retrieved 12 October 2018 Voyager 1 has left the Solar System Will we ever overtake it 23 May 2022 a b Thomas Hall Doyle 1992 Ultraviolet resonance radiation and the structure of the heliosphere University of Arizona Repository Bibcode 1992PhDT 12H a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Voyager 2 Approaches Interstellar Space Sky amp Telescope 10 October 2018 Retrieved 12 October 2018 a b c Potter Sean 9 December 2018 NASA s Voyager 2 Probe Enters Interstellar Space NASA Retrieved 2 November 2019 Voyager 2 crosses solar boundary moves into interstellar space Astronomy Now Release 10 December 2018 Retrieved 10 December 2018 a b Kanipe Jeff 27 January 2011 The Cosmic Connection How Astronomical Events Impact Life on Earth Prometheus Books ISBN 9781591028826 Luna 1 nssdc gsfc nasa gov Retrieved 15 December 2018 50th Anniversary Mariner 2 The Venus Mission NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory www jpl nasa gov Archived from the original on 17 May 2017 Retrieved 6 November 2019 Fact Sheet European Space Agency 15 March 2013 Retrieved 15 December 2018 Lallement R Quemerais E Bertaux J L Ferron S Koutroumpa D Pellinen R March 2005 Deflection of the Interstellar Neutral Hydrogen Flow Across the Heliospheric Interface Science 307 5714 1447 1449 SciHomepage Bibcode 2005Sci 307 1447L doi 10 1126 science 1107953 PMID 15746421 S2CID 36260574 Sources edit Heliopause Seems to Be 23 Billion Kilometres Universe Today 9 December 2003 Retrieved 8 August 2007 Space probes reveal Solar System s bullet shape COSMOS magazine 11 May 2007 Archived from the original on 13 May 2007 Retrieved 12 May 2007 Further reading editSchwadron N A et al 6 September 2011 Does the Space Environment Affect the Ecosphere Eos 92 36 297 301 Bibcode 2011EOSTr 92 297S doi 10 1029 2011eo360001 Universe Today this is what the solar system really looks likeExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Heliosphere Voyager Interstellar Mission Objectives NASA GALEX Galaxy evolution Explorer homepage at Caltech A Big Surprise from the Edge of the Solar System NASA 06 09 11 Portals nbsp Astronomy nbsp Stars nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Solar System nbsp Science Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Heliosphere amp oldid 1188507240 Heliopause, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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