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Will the Sun Enter a
Million-Degree Cloud of Interstellar Gas?
Ribbon at Edge of Our
Solar System: Will the Sun Enter a Million-Degree
Cloud of Interstellar Gas?

The Sun
traveling through the Galaxy happens to cross at the
present time a blob of gas about ten light-years
across, with a temperature of 6-7 thousand degrees
kelvin. This so-called Local Interstellar Cloud is
immersed in a much larger expanse of a
million-degree hot gas, named the Local Bubble. The
energetic neutral atoms (ENA) are generated by
charge exchange at the interface between the two
gaseous media. ENA can be observed provided the Sun
is close enough to the interface. The apparent
Ribbon of ENA discovered by the IBEX satellite can
be explained by a geometric effect: one observes
many more ENA by looking along a line-of-sight
almost tangent to the interface than by looking in
the perpendicular direction. (Credit: SRC/Tentaris,ACh/Maciej
Frolow)
Is the Sun
going to enter a million-degree galactic cloud of
interstellar gas soon?
Scientists from
the Space Research Centre of the Polish Academy of
Sciences, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Southwest
Research Institute, and Boston University suggest
that the ribbon of enhanced emissions of energetic
neutral atoms, discovered last year by the NASA
Small Explorer satellite IBEX, could be explained by
a geometric effect coming up because of the approach
of the Sun to the boundary between the Local Cloud
of interstellar gas and another cloud of a very hot
gas called the Local Bubble. If this hypothesis is
correct, IBEX is catching matter from a hot
neighboring interstellar cloud, which the Sun might
enter in a hundred years.
First full-sky
maps of the emissions of energetic neutral atoms
(ENA), obtained last year by IBEX, showed a
surprising arc-like feature called the Ribbon. This
astonishing discovery was later announced by NASA as
one of the most important findings in space
exploration made in 2009. Shortly after the
discovery six hypotheses were proposed to explain
the Ribbon, all of them predicting its relation to
processes going on within the heliosphere or in its
neighborhood. In a paper recently published in the
Astrophysical Journal Letters, a Polish-US
team of scientists led by Prof. Stan Grzedzielski
from the Space Research Centre of the Polish Academy
of Sciences in Warsaw, Poland, offers a different
explanation. "We observe the Ribbon," says
Grzedzielski "because the Sun is approaching a
boundary between our Local Cloud of interstellar gas
and another cloud of a very hot and turbulent gas."
Energetic neutral
atoms, registered by IBEX detectors, are born out of
ions (protons) speeding from the very hot Local
Bubble when they exchange charge with the relatively
cool atoms "evaporating" from the Local Interstellar
Cloud. The newly created ENA have no electrical
charge and therefore can dash freely in straight
lines from their birth site, oblivious of the
impeding magnetic fields. Some of them may reach
Earth orbit and be detected by IBEX. "Had the Ribbon
ENA been created at the boundaries of the
heliosphere, their birth site would be relatively
nearby, within just a couple of hundreds of
astronomical units," explains Dr Andrzej Czechowski
from SRC PAS, one of the co-authors of the paper. "According
to our hypothesis, they are born much, much farther
away."
The team of Polish
and US scientists suggests that the Ribbon ENA are
born by electrical charge exchange between the atoms
which "evaporate" from the Local Interstellar Cloud
into the nearby Local Bubble of a very hot and fully
ionized gas. The Local Bubble is probably a remnant
of a series of supernova explosions that occurred a
few million years ago and thus is not only very hot
(at least million degree Kelvin), but also
turbulent. The protons in the Local Bubble nearby to
the boundary with the Local Cloud snatch electrons
from the neutral atoms and run away in all
directions, some of them reaching IBEX.
"If our hypothesis
is correct, then we are catching atoms that
originate from an interstellar cloud that is
different from ours," says Dr. Maciej Bzowski,
co-investigator of the mission and head of the
Polish IBEX team. But since the creation of such ENA
atoms is occurring throughout the entire boundary
layer between the clouds, why do we see the Ribbon?
"It's a purely geometrical effect, which we observe
because the Sun is presently just in the right
place, within a thousand of astronomical units from
the cloud boundary," explains Grzedzielski. "If the
cloud-cloud boundary is flat, or better slightly
extruded towards the Sun, then it appears the
thinnest towards the center of the Ribbon and
thicker at the sides, right where we see the edge of
the Ribbon. If we were farther away from the
boundary, we would see no Ribbon, because all the
ENAs would be re-ionized and dispersed in the
intervening gas of the Local Cloud."
The model
developed by the Polish-US team suggests that the
boundary between the Local Cloud and the Local
Bubble might be not within a few light years from
the Sun, as it was believed earlier, but within just
a thousand of astronomical units, a thousand-fold
closer. This might mean that the Solar System could
enter the million-degree Local Bubble cloud as early
as the next century. "Nothing unusual, the Sun
frequently traverses various clouds of interstellar
gas during its galactic journey," comments
Grzedzielski. Such clouds are of very low density,
much lower than the best vacuum obtained in Earth
labs. Once in, the heliosphere will reform and may
shrink a little, the level of cosmic radiation
entering the magnetosphere may rise a bit, but
nothing more. "Perhaps future generations will have
to learn how to better harden their space hardware
against stronger radiation," suggests Grzedzielski.
IBEX is the latest
in NASA's series of low-cost, rapidly developed
Small Explorers space missions. Southwest Research
Institute in San Antonio, TX, leads and developed
the mission with a team of US and international
partners. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Md., manages the Explorers Program for
NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington DC.
Source:
Sciencedaily.com
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IBEX-satelliet brengt rand zonnestelsel in kaart
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