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" We Made It " - Voyager 1 leaves Solar sytem

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Nasa confirms Voyager 1 probe is in interstellar space - The Times of India


FLORIDA: Scientists have been debating for more than a year whether Nasa's 36-year-old Voyager 1 spacecraft has left the solar system and become the first human-made object to reach interstellar space.

By a fluke measurement, they now know definitively it has.

"We made it," lead Voyager scientist Edward Stone, from the California Institute of Technology, told reporters on Thursday.

The key piece of evidence came by chance when a pair of solar flares blasted charged particles in Voyager's direction in 2011 and 2012. It took a year for the particles to reach the spacecraft, providing information that could be used to determine how dense the plasma was in Voyager's location.

Plasma consists of charged particles and is more prevalent in the extreme cold of interstellar space than in the hot bubble of solar wind that permeates the solar system.

Voyager 1, now 13 billion miles (21 billion km) from Earth, could not make the measurement directly because its plasma detector stopped working more than 30 years ago.

"This was basically a lucky gift from the sun," Stone said.

Extrapolating from the measurements, scientists believe Voyager actually left the solar system in August 2012. That summer, the spacecraft radioed back another tantalizing piece of information, showing a huge spike in the number of galactic cosmic rays from outside the solar system and a corresponding decrease in particles emanating from the sun.

Scientists had been reluctant to conclude last year that Voyager had reached interstellar space because it was still picking up magnetic field measurements that were very similar to the sun's magnetic field.

Computer models had predicted a significant shift in the interstellar magnetic field's alignment.

"The magnetic field is still something that puzzles us considerably," said physicist Gary Zank, with the University of Alabama in Huntsville.

Scientists now believe the interstellar magnetic field is somehow draped around and twisted by the heliosphere, the bubble of space under the sun's influence.

Understanding how that happens is just one of the questions the Voyager team will attempt to figure out while the probe still has power. Voyager 1, and a sister spacecraft Voyager 2, use heat released by the natural decay of radioactive plutonium to generate electrical power for their instruments.

'TRULY ALIEN ENVIRONMENT'

After 2020, scientists expect they will have to start turning off instruments, until around 2025 when the probes will be completely out of power and fall silent.

Voyager 2, which is heading out of the solar system in another direction, has five to seven more years before it reaches interstellar space, said Donald Gurnett, a longtime Voyager scientist at the University of Iowa.

"We're in a truly alien environment," Zank said. "What Voyager is going to discover truly beggars the imagination."

The two Voyager probes, which were both launched in 1977 to study the outer planets of the solar system, contain gold phonographic records etched with music, greetings, sounds and images from Earth. The project was spearheaded by astronomer Carl Sagan, who died in 1996.

With Voyager 1 having left the solar system, the next time it will encounter a star is in 40,000 years, when it flies about 1.7 light years away from a star in the constellation Camelopardalis called AC +79 3888. The spacecraft is traveling nearly 1 million miles (1.6 million km) a day.

"Voyager has once again joined the ranks of the great human journeys of exploration," Gurnett said. "This is the first journey into interstellar space."

Nasa's twin Pioneer spacecraft, launched in the 1970s, also are leaving the solar system, but they have run out of power to relay information back to Earth.

The research is published in this week's journal Science.
 
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my apologies for spelling mistake in title of thread ....guess I was too excited !!!




http://www.history.com/news/6-fascinating-facts-about-space-probe-voyager-1





1. Voyager 1 has an identical twin.
In the early 1970s, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) developed a mission called Voyager to make a “grand tour” of Jupiter and Saturn—and possibly Uranus and Neptune if all went well. The agency planned to launch a pair of unmanned spacecraft on different trajectories to thoroughly study the planets from multiple angles. Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 are identical in construction. Each weighs around 1,500 pounds. Each is equipped to conduct 10 specific experiments, ranging from taking pictures to measuring atmospheric plasma concentrations. Each contains about 65,000 individual parts. (Some of those components represent technology that might seem laughable now but was cutting-edge at the time, such as a digital eight-track recorder.) When they were launched in 1977, the Voyagers were designed for a five-year lifespan, but both have outlived that projection by 30 years.

2. Voyager 1 actually launched after Voyager 2.
NASA launched Voyager 1 on September 5, 1977, 16 days after the launch of Voyager 2. Why this reversal in order? The Voyager mission was designed to take advantage of a rare configuration of the solar system’s giant planets, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. In this arrangement, which occurs roughly once every 175 years, the giants lined up in a way that would allow the probes to harness each planet’s gravitational forces to “swing” from one to the next with minimal self-propulsion. To accomplish this feat, the probes were launched on different trajectories. Voyager 2′s so-called slow trajectory would enable it to potentially visit all four giant planets, while Voyager 1′s faster trajectory would get it to Jupiter and Saturn before it headed into deep space. Voyager 1′s course allowed it to overtake Voyager 2 in the Asteroid Belt and gain the lead position in the mission. So, while Voyager 1 launched second, NASA knew all along it would take first place in the race to deep space, and they named it accordingly.

3. NASA engineers considered more than 10,000 possible trajectories for the Voyager mission.
Because of the complexity of using a “gravity assist” technique to propel Voyager 1 from Jupiter to Saturn and then on to interstellar space during its exploratory mission, NASA engineers considered thousands of potential trajectories for the probe. The engineers needed to chart a precise course that would take Voyager close to the planets but not so close that the next leg of the journey was compromised. Ultimately, NASA engineers chose a route for Voyager 1 that would ensure the completion of its primary mission to study the two giant planets before propelling it toward interstellar space. Thirty-five years later, it’s safe to say they chose well.

4. Any extraterrestrials who encounter Voyager 1 will need to figure out an ancient Earth technology called the “record player.”
In order to offer a sense of Earth’s culture to any spacefarers encountered by Voyager 1, NASA included a 12-inch gold-plated audiovisual disc on the craft. Dubbed the Golden Record, this disc contains a variety of content that was chosen by a committee chaired by the late scientist Carl Sagan. The disc includes photos and drawings, spoken greetings in many languages, music and Earth sounds. For the convenience of any alien life forms that discover the Golden Disc, NASA included a cartridge and needle for playback. However, the extraterrestrials will first have to figure out how to build a record player and speaker. Including that technology aboard Voyager 1 would have added too much weight and bulk.

5. It currently takes approximately 16 hours and 38 minutes to receive communications from Voyager 1.
With Voyager 1 positioned nearly 12 billion miles from Earth, according to NASA’s official live odometer, it takes over 16 hours for scientists to receive data from the probe—or for the spacecraft to receive signals from Earth. Voyager continues to send a steady stream of information to NASA scientists, including data on the direction of gravitational fields around it and the speed of surrounding solar winds. The solar wind speed has been registering as zero for some time now, indicating Voyager 1 is at the very fringe of the solar system where the sun’s energy blow-by doesn’t reach. Scientists believe the defining parameter confirming the probe’s move into interstellar space, however, will be a shift in surrounding magnetic fields from an east-west orientation to north-south. At that moment, which could occur any day now, Voyager 1 will pierce the veil of deep space.

6. In its final act of photography, Voyager 1 snapped the only existing portrait of our solar system.
Not long after Voyager 1′s encounter with Saturn in 1980, NASA engineers turned off the craft’s cameras to conserve energy. For nearly a decade, the probe quietly flew toward deep space. But as it approached the edge of the solar system, NASA engineers on February 14, 1990, instructed Voyager to turn its cameras back on and take a last look over its shoulder at the planets. In a series of 60 images, Voyager 1 returned the only “family portrait” of our solar system, including the sun, Venus, Earth, Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus. The photo mosaic depicts Earth as a small, pale blue *** afloat in the vastness of space. The photos were the last Voyager 1 ever took; its cameras were again turned off to maintain maximal energy reserves as the craft prepared to become the first manmade object to reach interstellar space.
 
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Posting here related details of Voyager mission for benefit of readers ....( who are too lazy to google it themselves ....Lol )



Voyager - The Interstellar Mission




Launch

Voyager 2 launched on August 20, 1977, from Cape Canaveral, Florida aboard a Titan-Centaur rocket. On September 5, Voyager 1 launched, also from Cape Canaveral aboard a Titan-Centaur rocket.

Planetary Tour

Between them, Voyager 1 and 2 explored all the giant planets of our outer solar system, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune; 48 of their moons; and the unique system of rings and magnetic fields those planets possess.



Closest approach to Jupiter occurred on March 5, 1979 for Voyager 1; July 9, 1979 for Voyager 2.



Closest approach to Saturn occurred on November 12, 1980 for Voyager 1; August 25, 1981 for Voyager 2.



Closest approach to Uranus occurred on January 24, 1986 by Voyager 2.



Closest approach to Neptune occurred on August 25, 1989 by Voyager 2.

Most Distant Spacecraft

The Voyager spacecraft will be the third and fourth human spacecraft to fly beyond all the planets in our solar system. Pioneers 10 and 11 preceded Voyager in outstripping the gravitational attraction of the Sun but on February 17, 1998, Voyager 1 passed Pioneer 10 to become the most distant human-made object in space.

The Golden Record

Both Voyager spacecrafts carry a greeting to any form of life, should that be encountered. The message is carried by a phonograph record - -a 12-inch gold-plated copper disk containing sounds and images selected to portray the diversity of life and culture on Earth. The contents of the record were selected for NASA by a committee chaired by Carl Sagan of Cornell University. Dr. Sagan and his associates assembled 115 images and a variety of natural sounds. To this they added musical selections from different cultures and eras, and spoken greetings from Earth-people in fifty-five languages.

Present Status

As of September 2013, Voyager 1 was at a distance of 18.7 billion kilometers (125.3 AU) from the Sun.



Voyager 2 was at a distance of 15.3 billion kilometers (102.6 AU).



Voyager 1 is escaping the solar system at a speed of about 3.6 AU per year.
Voyager 2 is escaping the solar system at a speed of about 3.3 AU per year.



There are currently five science investigation teams participating in the Interstellar Mission. They are:

1. Magnetic field investigation
2. Low energy charged particle investigation
3. Cosmic ray investigation
4. Plasma Investigation (Voyager 2 only)
5. Plasma wave investigation

Five instruments onboard the Voyagers directly support the five science investigations. The five instruments are:

1. Magnetic field instrument (MAG)
2. Low energy charged particle instrument (LECP)
3. Cosmic ray instrument (CRS)
4. Plasma instrument (PLS)
5. Plasma wave instrument (PWS)

One other instrument is collecting data but does not have official science investigation associated with it:

6. Ultraviolet spectrometer subsystem (UVS), Voyager 1 only

Termination Shock

Voyager 1 crossed the termination shock in December 2004 at about 94 AU from the Sun while Voyager 2 crossed it in August 2007 at about 84 AU. Both spacecraft are now exploring the Heliosheath.

The Heliopause

While the exact location of the Heliopause is not known, it has been estimated that Voyager could reach this entry into interstellar space 10 years after crossing the Termination Shock.
 
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Just imagine! it's taken 36 years for a spacecraft to leave the Solar System traveling at 1.6 million km per day! Now check out this video. It's just mind blowing. Yes! The universe is so huge it's incomprehensible! Trillions upon trillions of galaxies, each with billions of star systems and ours is just one miniscule part of our galaxy somewhere in the nondescript outer periphery of one of the galaxy's spiral arms.

Here...Enjoy....(This is just the KNOWN universe. Also don't forget to read the descriptions on the top and bottom edges of the screen).


And Voyager has just left the Solar System after 36 years traveling at more than 70,000 kmh!!! :woot:
 
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Götterdämmerung;4766287 said:
Why "We made it"? You aren't US American, are you?
Your power of comprehension seems to be abysmally low. Is your blabber by default or design? It's the American who said that and not an Indian!! Here....

"We made it," lead Voyager scientist Edward Stone, from the California Institute of Technology, told reporters on Thursday.

And Edward Stone ain't Indian. He's American in case you did not know! :P
 
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Just imagine! it's taken 36 years for a spacecraft to leave the Solar System traveling at 1.6 million km per day! Now check out this video. It's just mind blowing. Yes! The universe is so huge it's incomprehensible! Trillions upon trillions of galaxies, each with billions of star systems and ours is just one miniscule part of our galaxy somewhere in the nondescript outer periphery of one of the galaxy's spiral arms.

Here...Enjoy....(This is just the KNOWN universe. Also don't forget to read the descriptions on the top and bottom edges of the screen).


And Voyager has just left the Solar System after 36 years traveling at more than 70,000 kmh!!! :woot:




Amazing .....!


" There is known ....there is Known Unknown ......Thereafter there is unknown Unknown ..... and beyond that there is Unknowable ......"
 
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Götterdämmerung;4766287 said:
Why "We made it"? You aren't US American, are you?


Have you read the article ?....I just quoted the Expression by Ed Stone ....

Where did I ever say that I am American ....?


I am an Indian ....content and proud to be one ....!

and I do not take credit for American achievments ....

The expression caught my eye ....and I thought it will attract others to read this magnificent news ....that's why I used it in title !


Is that explanation enough ???
 
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Götterdämmerung;4766287 said:
Why "We made it"? You aren't US American, are you?

you're senior member here,yet failed to comprehend that here "We" isn't Indians,but the Mankind..Voyager 1 and 2 are the invitation card to any unknown but intelligent civilization out there and to tell them that we,the Humans are trying to contact with them..may be you don't even know that what Voyager-1 and Voyager-2 contains..and may be you think its all gimmick..but believe me,those scientists who made the unique idea how to actually invite them and how to tell the exact co-ordinates of Earth is simply brilliant..


From Wiki----


Voyager 1 and 2 both carry with them a golden record that contains pictures and sounds of Earth, along with symbolic directions for playing the record and data detailing the location of Earth.[3] The record is intended as a combination time capsule and interstellar message to any civilization, alien or far-future human, that may recover either of the Voyager craft. The contents of this record were selected by a committee that included Timothy Ferris[3] and was chaired by Carl Sagan.


just like Pioneer-10 and 11,it also carries golden record...do you know whats that is???

golden_record_cover_sm.jpg


Voyager Golden Record - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

also see this....

Communication with extraterrestrial intelligence - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
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Your power of comprehension seems to be abysmally low. Is your blabber by default or design? It's the American who said that and not an Indian!! Here....

"We made it," lead Voyager scientist Edward Stone, from the California Institute of Technology, told reporters on Thursday.

And Edward Stone ain't Indian. He's American in case you did not know! :P

The article of OP was published by TOI. Title of thread and title of article don't match. Didn't know that TOI is US American.

Having seen you guys taking credit of others, it's reasonable to assume that you guys also take credit of the Voyager.

Oh, look a bunch of Indian, like a pack of hyenas going after me. LOL
 
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It's you ....who is going after Indians like hyena ....

You should have read article fully before jumping to conclusions and posting such nonsense query ....!
 
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Götterdämmerung;4766287 said:
Why "We made it"? You aren't US American, are you?

Hey Man stop being an @$$. First of all OP just quoted the article and second of all even if he says that it doesn't matter cause we as humans or Earthlings have have sent an object to a place where nothing from Earth has ever been in recorded history so take you nationalism BS and shove it.

Thank You.
 
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Hey Man stop being an @$$. First of all OP just quoted the article and second of all even if he says that it doesn't matter cause we as humans or Earthlings have have sent an object to a place where nothing from Earth has ever been in recorded history so take you nationalism BS and shove it.

Thank You.

No thanks, OP changed the title and according to forum rule it's not allowed. The title of the thread is misleading and since OP is Indian, one might think that he was talking about India.

The funny thing is, German news are also reporting about the Voyager, and no one is saying "we human did this".
 
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