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Voyager Termination Shock



Figure 1. Frequency-time spectrogram showing plasma oscillations preceding termination shock crossing.
Shock crossing geometry
Figure 2. Geometry of the termination shock crossing.

Figure 1 above is a frequency-time spectrogram showing plasma oscillations detected near the termination shock by the Voyager 1 plasma wave instrument. The spectrogram covers an interval of three hours, from 18:00 to 21:00 on Dec 15, 2004. In the audio sound file this interval has been compressed to 6 seconds.

Figure 2 above shows the likely geometry of the termination shock during the crossing on December 16, 2004. As the spacecraft approached the shock (indicated by the dashed lines), it encountered a magnetic field line that is tangent to a small ripple in the shock front. An electron beam escaping from the shock along the tangent magnetic field line caused the electron plasma oscillations shown in Figure 1. Shortly after that, on December 16, the spacecraft passed through the termination shock.

Don Gurnett
Principal Investigator of the Voyager PWS


Voyager Enters Solar System's Final Frontier - NASA

Voyager 1 Crosses a New Frontier and May Save Itself From Termination - Science Magazine

Voyager Spacecraft Hits Interstellar Turbulence - NPR

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Last modified Friday, 27-May-2005 14:53:28 CDT
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The Radio and Plasma Wave Group, Department of Physics & Astronomy, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences.
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