COSMOS magazine

Get COSMOS Teacher's Notes
  • Add this story to stumbleupon
  • Add this story to Yahoo Buzz
  • Add this story to Digg
  • Add this story to reddit
  • Add this story to Slashdot
  • Add this story to newsvine
  • Add this story to facebook
  • Add this story to technorati
  • Add this story to del-icio-us
  • Add this story to furl

News

IBEX probe maps outer Solar System

Friday, 16 October 2009
Agence France-Presse

Single page print view

IBEX

The IBEX probe was only launched in October 2008, but has already has produced stunning results, scientists said.

Credit: NASA

WASHINGTON DC: A NASA probe exploring the outer edges of the Solar System has helped scientists create the first map of this little-understood region of space 16 billion kilometres from Earth.

Data from the U.S. space agency's Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) spacecraft is helping researchers explore the boundary between our Sun and the rest of the galaxy by collecting high-speed particles and ions.

The IBEX probe is the latest in NASA's series of low-cost, rapidly developed Small Explorers space missions, and was launched in October 2008, but has already has produced stunning results, scientists said.

Bright ribbon

"The IBEX results are truly remarkable, with emissions not resembling any of the current theories or models of this never-before-seen region," said IBEX principal investigator David McComas.

"We expected to see small, gradual spatial variations at the interstellar boundary, some 10 billion miles away," said McComas, who is also assistant vice president of the Space Science and Engineering Division at Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas.

"IBEX is showing us a very narrow ribbon that is two to three times brighter than anything else in the sky." That bright narrow ribbon that snakes through the sky "remained completely undetected until now," McComas said.

Interstellar boundary

NASA said that a closer look at segments of the ribbon revealed fine structures, which suggests that ion densities may be significantly enhanced in highly localised regions at the interstellar boundary.

Scientists long have been keen to investigate the boundary between the Solar System and the rest of our galaxy.

They are particularly eager to learn more about the dust and gas that fills the area between the stars, referred to as interstellar medium and how this interacts with the solar wind; charged particles continuously travelling at supersonic speeds away from the Sun in all directions.