秘密直播

Press Release

Cassini Helps Redraw Shape of Solar System

In a paper published Oct. 15 in , researchers from The 秘密直播 University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) present a new view of the region of the sun鈥檚 influence, or heliosphere, and the forces that shape it. Images from one of the Magnetospheric Imaging Instrument鈥檚 sensors, the Ion and Neutral Camera (MIMI/INCA), on NASA鈥檚 Cassini spacecraft suggest that the heliosphere may not have the comet-like shape predicted by existing models.

鈥淭hese images have revolutionized what we thought we knew for the past fifty years; the sun travels through the galaxy not like a comet but more like a big, round bubble鈥 said Stamatios Krimigis, principal investigator for MIMI, which is orbiting Saturn. 鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing how a single new observation can change an entire concept that most scientists had taken as true for nearly fifty years.鈥

As the solar wind flows from the sun, it carves out a bubble in the interstellar medium. Models of the boundary region between the heliosphere and interstellar medium have been based on the assumption that the relative flow of the interstellar medium and its collision with the solar wind dominate the interaction. This would create a foreshortened 鈥渘ose鈥 in the direction of the solar system鈥檚 motion, and an elongated 鈥渢ail鈥 in the opposite direction.

The INCA images suggest that the solar wind鈥檚 interaction with the interstellar medium is instead more significantly controlled by particle pressure and magnetic field energy density.

鈥淭he map we鈥檝e created from INCA鈥檚 images suggests that pressure from a hot population of charged particles and interaction with the interstellar medium鈥檚 magnetic field strongly influence the shape of the heliosphere,鈥 says Don Mitchell, MIMI/INCA co-investigator at APL.