A new sky map shows the region where our solar system bumps up against interstellar boundaries

Interstellar Boundary Forget spaceship Earth, here's a real interstellar voyage NASA

Lost galactic hitchhikers can now rejoice when they visit our corner of the Milky Way. A new sky map created by a NASA spacecraft shows the boundaries of our solar system in comparison to the rest of the interstellar neighborhood.

The boundaries are defined by our sun's heliosphere -- a protective bubble created by the solar wind that travels outward and collides with incoming interstellar radiation. That typically invisible boundary became visible through energetic neutral atoms created in the region that speed toward the sun at velocities ranging up to 2.4 million mph.

NASA's Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) spent six months counting and measuring the energetic neutral atoms in order to create the new sky map. The Cassini probe currently exploring Saturn also contributed with an imaging instrument sensor.

The new IBEX map has already revealed a new ribbon of energy in the interstellar boundary region. That band of bright emissions somehow went undetected by the twin Voyager spacecraft that continue to travel outwards through the boundary.

"The Voyagers are providing ground truth, but they're missing the most exciting region," said Eric Christian, the IBEX deputy mission scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "It's like having two weather stations that miss the big storm that runs between them."

[via NASA]

2 Comments

I'm sorry to say but this looks something a kid did using some imaging software on his home computer. Also it the graphics seem to be the same quality as you would get from Playing a PS1 game using a PC PSx emulator.

Sometimes it isn't about looking pretty.



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