NASA’s Voyager 2 probe has entered interstellar space



NASA/JPL-Caltech

NASA’s Voyager 2 spacecraft has exited the heliosphere — the plasma bubble created by the sun that encompasses most of our solar system — and entered interstellar space, making it the second human-made object to do so. Voyager 1 hit this milestone in 2012. NASA said Voyager 2 crossed over the heliopause, the boundary between the heliosphere and interstellar space, on November 5th and the probe is now more than 11 billion miles from Earth.

“I think we’re all happy and relieved that the Voyager probes have both operated long enough to make it past this milestone,” Voyager Project Manager Suzanne Dodd said in a statement. “This is what we’ve all been waiting for. Now we’re looking forward to what we’ll be able to learn from having both probes outside the heliopause.”

NASA announced back in October that it suspected this moment might happen soon. The spacecraft had been detecting increasing amounts of cosmic rays, something Voyager 1 experienced in 2012. But Voyager 2 has something its partner didn’t when it left the heliosphere — a functional Plasma Science Experiment. Voyager 1’s stopped working in 1980, but Voyager 2’s is still in working order, and it’s able to take measurements of the solar wind. On November 5th, Voyager 2 detected a sharp drop in the speed of solar wind particles and since then, it hasn’t measured any solar wind flow at all — strong evidence that it has exited the sun’s protective bubble.

Three other onboard instruments — the cosmic ray subsystem, the low energy charged particle probe and the magnetometer — also recorded data that fit with what would be expected when exiting the heliosphere.