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Ulysses
Reveals Global Solar Wind Plasma Output at 50-Year Low
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Credit:
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab
Data from the Ulysses
spacecraft, a joint NASA-European Space Agency mission, show the
sun has reduced its output of solar wind to the lowest levels
since accurate readings became available. The sun's current state
could reduce the natural shielding that envelops our solar
system.
"The sun's million mile-per-hour solar wind
inflates a protective bubble, or heliosphere, around the solar
system. It influences how things work here on Earth and even out
at the boundary of our solar system where it meets the galaxy,"
said Dave McComas, Ulysses' solar wind instrument principal
investigator and senior executive director at the Southwest
Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas. "Ulysses data
indicate the solar wind's global pressure is the lowest we have
seen since the beginning of the space age."
The
sun's solar wind plasma is a stream of charged particles ejected
from the sun's upper atmosphere. The solar wind interacts with
every planet in our solar system. It also defines the border
between our solar system and interstellar space.
This
border, called the heliopause, is a bubble-shaped boundary
surrounding our solar system where the solar wind's strength is
no longer great enough to push back the wind of other stars. The
region around the heliopause also acts as a shield for our solar
system, warding off a significant portion of the cosmic rays
outside the galaxy.
"Galactic cosmic rays carry with
them radiation from other parts of our galaxy," said Ed
Smith, NASA's Ulysses project scientist at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "With the solar wind at an
all-time low, there is an excellent chance the heliosphere will
diminish in size and strength. If that occurs, more galactic
cosmic rays will make it into the inner part of our solar
system."
Galactic cosmic rays are of great interest
to NASA. Cosmic rays are linked to engineering decisions for
unmanned interplanetary spacecraft and exposure limits for
astronauts traveling beyond low-Earth orbit.
In 2007,
Ulysses made its third rapid scan of the solar wind and magnetic
field from the sun's south to north pole. When the results were
compared with observations from the previous solar cycle, the
strength of the solar wind pressure and the magnetic field
embedded in the solar wind were found to have decreased by 20
percent. The field strength near the spacecraft has decreased by
36 percent.
"The sun cycles between periods of great
activity and lesser activity," Smith said. "Right now,
we are in a period of minimal activity that has stretched on
longer than anyone anticipated."
Ulysses was the
first mission to survey the space environment over the sun's
poles. Data Ulysses has returned have forever changed the way
scientists view our star and its effects. The venerable
spacecraft has lasted more than 17 years, or almost four times
its expected mission lifetime. The Ulysses solar wind findings
were published in a recent edition of Geophysical Research
Letters.
The Ulysses spacecraft was carried into Earth
orbit aboard space shuttle Discovery on Oct. 6, 1990. From Earth
orbit it was propelled toward Jupiter, passing the planet on Feb.
8, 1992. Jupiter's immense gravity bent the spacecraft's flight
path downward and away from the plane of the planets' orbits.
This placed Ulysses into a final orbit around the sun that would
take it over its north and south poles.
The Ulysses
spacecraft was provided by ESA, having been built by Astrium GmbH
(formerly Dornier Systems) of Friedrichshafen, Germany. NASA
provided the launch vehicle and the upper stage boosters. The
U.S. Department of Energy supplied a radioisotope thermoelectric
generator to power the spacecraft. Science instruments were
provided by U.S. and European investigators. The spacecraft is
operated from JPL by a joint NASA-ESA team.
Source:
NASA

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