University of Maryland
Computer & Space Science Building, Room 2400
4:30 PM Monday, 19 September
Coffee, Tea & Cookies 4:00-4:30 PM
Merav Opher
George Mason University
Effect of the Interstellar Magnetic Field on the Termination Shock: Explaining the Voyager Results
After a twenty-seven year journey, Voyager 1 crossed the termination shock, the first boundary separating the solar system from the rest of the galaxy, and is now on the other side exploring the heliosheath. Since mid-2002 Voyager 1 has been observing strong beams of energetic particles coming outward along the spiral magnetic field, the opposite of the direction expected for particles accelerated at the shock. This can be explained if the shock is non- spherical so that the interplanetary magnetic field lines cross the shock and reenters the solar wind before reaching Voyager 1. This configuration has been invoked recently (Jokipii et al. 2004; Stone et al. 2005) to reconcile the data recently collected and explain how Voyager 1 can detect energetic particles accelerated at the shock several years before crossing it. We show that the termination shock is, in fact, non-spherical due the distortion caused by an inclined interstellar magnetic field. We use the best values for the direction of the interstellar magnetic field (derived by Frisch 2003; and Lallement et al. 2005) showing that the shape of the termination shock depends strongly on the direction of the interstellar magnetic field. We also make predictions for Voyager 2 that will encounter the shock in the next couple of years.
Sponsored by: Department of Physics
and the Institute for Physical Science and Technology, University of Maryland. For information
call John Paquette at (301) 405-6208 or go to the UMD Space Physics group seminar web site.
For free parking please park in lot DD or anywhere on levels 1-2 in lot B (the big parking garage) after 4:00 pm.
Make sure that you park in a spot WITHOUT a parking meter. More parking information is at the seminar website.