In the gloaming
May. 25th, 2005 09:04 amRegistration may be required to access this WP story about Voyager 1's entry into regions of space unknown, but I think it's worth it.
After a storied, 28-year odyssey, NASA's venerable Voyager 1 spacecraft appears to have reached the edge of the solar system, a turbulent zone of near-nothingness where the solar wind begins to give way to interstellar space in a cosmic cataclysm known as "termination shock," scientists said yesterday.
And the spookiest line:
"The spacecraft knows nothing about what is going on," Stone said. "It is just sending us the data."
I'm trying to imagine what it may feel like to sit perched atop Voyager as it courses through space. What's the view like? What would I see? How would I feel?
After a storied, 28-year odyssey, NASA's venerable Voyager 1 spacecraft appears to have reached the edge of the solar system, a turbulent zone of near-nothingness where the solar wind begins to give way to interstellar space in a cosmic cataclysm known as "termination shock," scientists said yesterday.
And the spookiest line:
"The spacecraft knows nothing about what is going on," Stone said. "It is just sending us the data."
I'm trying to imagine what it may feel like to sit perched atop Voyager as it courses through space. What's the view like? What would I see? How would I feel?