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ScienceDaily (May 10, 2012) — New results from NASA's Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) reveal that the bow shock, widely accepted by researchers to precede the heliosphere as it plows through tenuous gas and dust from the galaxy does not exist.
According to a paper published in the journal Science online, the latest refinements in relative speed and local interstellar magnetic field strength prevent the heliosphere, the magnetic "bubble" that cocoons Earth and the other planets, from developing a bow shock. The bow shock would consist of ionized gas or plasma that abruptly and discontinuously changes in density in the region of space that lies straight ahead of the heliosphere.
"The sonic boom made by a jet breaking the sound barrier is an earthly example of a bow shock," says Dr. David McComas, principal investigator of the IBEX mission and assistant vice president of the Space Science and Engineering Division at Southwest Research Institute (SwRI). "As the jet reaches supersonic speeds, the air ahead of it can't get out of the way fast enough. Once the aircraft hits the speed of sound, the interaction changes instantaneously, resulting in a shock wave."
we're finding that our Sun's interaction doesn't reach the critical threshold to form a shock, so a wave is a more accurate depiction of what's happening ahead of our heliosphere
The sun isn’t quite the speed demon scientists once suspected. It chugs around the galactic center at a relatively pokey 83,500 kilometers per hour — or roughly 11,000 kilometers per hour slower than expected, says a report appearing online May 10 in Science.
Though the ramifications of a missing bow shock are still unknown, scientists can now study more precisely how the heliosphere responds to the sun’s travels through different interstellar voids and clouds.
Next thing you know,they will be telling us about the cosmic rays they didn't know about coming through our solar system.
Is it safe to assume that a bow shock is similar in nature to the Earth's Magnetosphere in that it protects our Solar System from harsh cosmic rays as the Earth's magnetosphere protects us from the Sun's radiation?
Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by kdog1982
Next thing you know,they will be telling us about the cosmic rays they didn't know about coming through our solar system.
They know about the galactic cosmic rays. What they don't know yet is what this revised model means about how they are affected by the heliosphere.
It would seem to me that at a basic level, lacking the increased density of a bow shock, we should be seeing more cosmic ray activity form "forward" than previous models would show.edit on 5/11/2012 by Phage because: (no reason given)
As scientists incorporate this substantive new understanding into their physical models, they will also be waiting for more evidence from both IBEX and the Voyagers, which they hope will continue to send back observations for many years to come. "Imagine the point at which Voyager crosses the threshold of the heliopause and either does or does not see what IBEX is predicting," says Schwadron. "There will be enormous opportunities for scientific advancement."
Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by UberL33t
Is it safe to assume that a bow shock is similar in nature to the Earth's Magnetosphere in that it protects our Solar System from harsh cosmic rays as the Earth's magnetosphere protects us from the Sun's radiation?
The heliosphere acts more like the Earth's atmosphere, absorbing the energy of galactic cosmic rays the same way the atmosphere absorbs the energy of solar particles and creates the aurora. But, since unlike the magnetosphere, there is no mechanism for the cosmic particles to be trapped and directed, the cosmic radiation would influence the entire heliosphere, not just the "poles". The presense of a bowshock would offer more density in the forward regions though, so may offer slightly more protection.
Originally posted by intergalactic fire
Originally posted by Phage
reply to post by UberL33t
Is it safe to assume that a bow shock is similar in nature to the Earth's Magnetosphere in that it protects our Solar System from harsh cosmic rays as the Earth's magnetosphere protects us from the Sun's radiation?
The heliosphere acts more like the Earth's atmosphere, absorbing the energy of galactic cosmic rays the same way the atmosphere absorbs the energy of solar particles and creates the aurora. But, since unlike the magnetosphere, there is no mechanism for the cosmic particles to be trapped and directed, the cosmic radiation would influence the entire heliosphere, not just the "poles". The presense of a bowshock would offer more density in the forward regions though, so may offer slightly more protection.
This could all change because of the new findings?
You know if their are studies or theories on the same effect, bowshock, but on galaxies scales.
Does a galaxy create something while travelling through intergalactic space?
Surrounding and stretching between galaxies, there is a rarefied plasma[85] that is organized in a cosmic filamentary structure.[86] This material is called the intergalactic medium (IGM). The density of the IGM is 5-200 times the average density of the Universe.[87] It consists mostly of ionized hydrogen; i.e. a plasma consisting of equal numbers of electrons and protons. As gas falls into the intergalactic medium from the voids, it heats up to temperatures of 105 K to 107 K,[88] which is high enough so that collisions between atoms have enough energy to cause the bound electrons to escape from the hydrogen nuclei; this is why the IGM is ionized.
A Bow Shock is there when there is something for an object to be traveling through it at a high enough velocity