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New Signs Voyager Is Nearing Interstellar Space

sighted writes "Yesterday, someone tweeting for the Voyager 2 spacecraft posted: 'Interesting. Compare my data 4 high-energy nucleons w V1's That increase is attracting attention!' Today, NASA says that scientists looking at this rapid rise draw closer to an inevitable but historic conclusion — that humanity's first emissary to interstellar space is on the edge of our solar system. Project scientist Ed Stone said, 'The latest data indicate that we are clearly in a new region where things are changing more quickly. It is very exciting. We are approaching the solar system's frontier.'"

3 of 168 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Translation please? by YttriumOxide · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Interesting. Compare my data 4 high-energy nucleons w V1's That increase is attracting attention!"

    I've tried four times and can't parse that string, let alone make sense of it. Can someone from the appropriate generation translate it for me, please?

    Translation:
    "Interesting. Compare my [Voyager 2's] data for high-energy nucleons with Voyager 1's [data for high-energy nucleons]. That increase [that is, the increase shown in Voyager 2's high-energy nucleon data over Voyager 1's high-energy nucleon data] is attracting attention!"

    --
    My book about LSD and Self-Discovery
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  2. Already from Saturn... by Herve5 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I remember when the Huygens probe landed on Titan (Huygens, from the Cassini/Huygens mission: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassini%E2%80%93Huygens )

    I was part of the Huygens team, and I really experience a special moment as concerns time:
    - building the Probe had been quite a long period in my own life (years)
    - once launched, the travel from Earth to Saturn lasted *seven years* : enough for you to deeply change your business occupation, and mostly loose contact with your former team, customer team, science team
    - then what was happening at that very time was, due to Earth/Saturn distance, transmitting the probe entry and descent data would last *longer than the real descent itself* : in other words, you were still waiting to see whether the thing you'd spent years in the building didn't just burn upon atmosphere entry, while you *knew* everything over there was finished already.

    So believe me, this feeling of meeting back with friends lost for 10 years, to listen what your device may have sent some hours ago knowing that at present indeed all the adventure has been over for one hour... that was very special.

    Also, the explanations of this to the journalists in the ground station rooms by your average public relation guy was definitely funny to watch :-D

    --
    Herve S.
  3. Re:I don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    They know where voyager is.

    They don't know where interstellar space is.