NASA‘s
New Horizons spacecraft has helped scientists study a mysterious phenomenon at
the edge of the Solar System, where particles from the Sun and interstellar
space interact.\ This region, about 100 times further from the Sun than Earth,
is where uncharged hydrogen atoms from interstellar space meet charged
particles from our Sun. The latter extend out from our Sun in a bubble called
the heliosphere.

At
the point where the two interact, known as the heliopause, it’s thought there
is a build-up of hydrogen from interstellar space. This creates a sort of
“wall”, which scatters incoming ultraviolet light. About 30 years
ago NASA’s Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft first detected this wall, and
now New Horizons has found new evidence for it. A paper describing its findings
will be published in Geophysical
Research Letters.
“We’re seeing the threshold between being in the solar neighborhood and being in the galaxy,” Dr Leslie Young from the Southwest Research Institute in Colorado, one of the co-authors on the paper, told Science News.

New
Horizons made the detection using its Alice UV spectrometer, taking
measurements from 2007 to 2017. It found an ultraviolet glow known as a
Lyman-alpha line, which is made when solar particles hit hydrogen atoms. We see
this ultraviolet glow all over the Solar System. But at the heliopause, there
appears to be an additional source caused by the wall of hydrogen, creating a
larger glow. Beyond the wall there’s more ultraviolet light compared to in
front of it, suggesting it's being scattered by the wall.
"This distant source could be the signature of a wall of hydrogen, formed near where the interstellar wind encounters the solar wind," the researchers wrote in their paper.
The
theory is not definitive yet. It’s possible that another source of
ultraviolet light in our galaxy could be causing this background glow. To find
out for sure, New Horizons will continue looking for the wall about twice a
year. At some point, New Horizons will cross the wall, if it exists, so the
amount of ultraviolet light it detects will decrease. That would provide some
additional evidence that the wall is really there.
Voyager
1 and 2 are both past the wall now, so they’re unable to make any further
detections. But New Horizons is only 42 times further from the Sun than Earth,
a distance it has taken about 12 years to achieve, and is currently on its way
to explore a new target called Ultima
Thule having flown past Pluto in 2015.
If
our estimates are correct, then by the time the mission ends in about 10 to 15
years, it should hopefully have just about made it to the wall. At that point,
we might really know for sure if it’s there or not.
Comments
Post a Comment