STEREO Creates First Images of the Solar System's Invisible Frontier

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July 2, 2008

J.D. Harrington
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-5241
j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx

Laura Layton
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
301-286-8170
laura.a.layton@xxxxxxxx

Robert Sanders
University of California, Berkeley
501-643-6998
rsanders@xxxxxxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 08-165

STEREO CREATES FIRST IMAGES OF THE SOLAR SYSTEM'S INVISIBLE FRONTIER

GREENBELT, Md. -- NASA's sun-focused Solar Terrestrial Relations 
Observatory, or STEREO, twin spacecraft unexpectedly detected 
particles from the edge of the solar system last year. This helped 
scientists map the energized particles where the hot solar wind slams 
into the cold interstellar medium.

The two STEREO spacecraft were launched in 2006 into Earth's orbit 
around the sun to obtain stereo pictures of the sun's surface and 
measure magnetic fields and ion fluxes associated with solar 
explosions. From June to October 2007, sensors aboard both STEREO 
spacecraft detected energetic neutral atoms originating from the same 
spot in the sky, where the sun plunges through the interstellar 
medium. 

Mapping the region by means of neutral, or uncharged, atoms instead of 
light "heralds a new kind of astronomy using neutral atoms," said Dr. 
Robert Lin, professor of physics at the University of California, 
Berkeley and lead for the suprathermal electron sensor aboard the 
STEREO spacecraft. "You can't get a global picture of this region, 
one of the last unexplored regions of the heliosphere, through normal 
telescopes," Lin said. The heliosphere is a bubble in space produced 
by the solar wind. It stretches from the sun to beyond the orbit of 
Pluto. The solar wind streams off the Sun in all directions at great 
speeds. Once beyond the orbit of Pluto, this supersonic wind must 
slow down to meet the gases in the interstellar medium. As the solar 
wind slows, it changes direction to form a comet-like tail behind the 
sun. This subsonic flow region is called the heliosheath.

The results, reported in the July 3 issue of the journal Nature, clear 
up a discrepancy in the amount of energy dumped into space by the 
decelerating solar wind. The solar wind was detected when Voyager 2 
entered the heliosheath.

Researchers determined that the newly discovered population of ions in 
the heliosheath contains about 70 percent of the dissipated energy 
from the solar wind, exactly the amount unaccounted for by Voyager 
2's instruments. The Voyager 2 results also are reported in the July 
3 issue of Nature. The Berkeley team concluded that these energetic 
neutral atoms were originally ions heated up in the termination shock 
area that lost their charge to cold atoms in the interstellar medium 
and, no longer hindered by magnetic fields, flowed back toward the 
sun and into the sensors aboard STEREO.

"This is the first mapping of energetic neutral particles from the 
edge of the heliosphere," Lin said. According to Lin, the neutral 
atoms are probably hydrogen, which comprise most of the particles in 
the local interstellar medium.

The charge exchange between hot ions and neutral atoms to generate 
energetic neutral atoms is well known around the sun and planets, 
including Earth and Jupiter. Spacecraft have used this as a means of 
remotely measuring the energy in ion plasmas since neutral atoms 
travel much farther than ions. 

NASA plans to launch the Interstellar Boundary Explorer, or IBEX, 
later this year to more thoroughly map the boundary of the solar 
system.

For more information about NASA's STEREO mission, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/stereo

	
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