The Effects of a Local Interstellar Magnetic Field on Voyager 1 and 2 Observations

  • Opher M
  • Stone E
  • Liewer P
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Abstract

We show that an interstellar magnetic field can produce a north-south asymmetry in the solar wind termination shock. Using Voyager 1 and 2 measurements, we suggest that the angle a between the interstellar wind velocity and the magnetic field is. The distortion of the shock is such that termination shock particles could 30 ! a ! 60 have streamed outward along the spiral interplanetary magnetic field connecting Voyager 1 to the shock when the spacecraft was within ∼2 AU of the shock. The shock distortion is larger in the southern hemisphere, and Voyager 2 could be connected to the shock when it is within ∼5 AU of the shock, but with particles from the shock streaming inward along the field. Tighter constraints on the interstellar magnetic field should be possible when Voyager 2 crosses the shock in the next several years.

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Opher, M., Stone, E. C., & Liewer, P. C. (2006). The Effects of a Local Interstellar Magnetic Field on Voyager 1 and 2 Observations. The Astrophysical Journal, 640(1), L71–L74. https://doi.org/10.1086/503251

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