When the last Voyager pictures from Neptune (and perhaps even more eagerly awaited, the images of Triton) came in back in 1989, I distinctly recall the sense of letdown that set in the following week. All those spectacular Voyager findings were, I then assumed, a thing of the past. But as we’ve seen, the Voyagers are robust little spacecraft, pushing on toward the heliospause and the edge of interstellar space. Still functional, one or both may be sending us signals when they make this final transition within the next ten to twenty years.

Which is not to say we don’t need follow-up missions to explore this territory (Innovative Interstellar Explorer, using radioisotope methods to power an ion engine, immediately comes to mind), but what a grand story the Voyagers continue to write. And consider this finding: Because the two spacecraft took entirely different routes, Voyager 2 is crossing the termination shock region some 20 billion kilometers away from Voyager 1’s present location. Voyager 2 is also almost two billion kilometers closer to the Sun. The upshot: The bubble created around our Solar System by the solar wind is clearly asymmetric.

Voyager’s most recent discovery will be discussed at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union at the Moscone Center in San Francisco from December 10 to 14. Other topics of interest to deep space advocates that help us take the pulse of current research and potential future missions:

  • Cassini scientists Larry Esposito and Miodrag Sremcevic report on mounting support for the idea that Saturn’s rings are permanent rather than temporary features. The Cassini orbiter, yet another heroic spacecraft, is sending data showing that when ring particles fragment, they tend to re-group, keeping the overall ring structure more or less intact. If the work bears out, there goes the older idea that the rings are as recent as the dinosaurs.
  • Members of the New Horizons team (including Johns Hopkins’ Ralph McNutt, a guiding force behind Innovative Interstellar Explorer) will talk about what the Pluto-bound New Horizons found as it barreled down the tail of Jupiter’s magnetosphere. Ponder this: Io alone ejects a ton per second of volcanic gases. These become ionized and accelerated by Jupiter’s magnetic field, a phenomenon New Horizons has now measured for a solid three months.
  • I’m also glad to see William McKinnon (Washington University, St. Louis) reporting on the current view of Europa and its possible habitability under the ice. That session will feature three presentations, covering the possibility of radar sounding to search for water and a report on plans to deploy an autonomous underwater robotic vehicle in the Antarctic. Such a vehicle may become a prototype for future exploration on the Jovian moon.

Centauri Dreams, of course, focuses on the outer Solar System and the possibility of missions far beyond it, to the Kuiper Belt, the Oort Cloud, and one day the nearest stars. But while we’re talking about doughty spacecraft, let’s not forget the two that are much closer to home. The remarkable Spirit and Opportunity are now four years into Mars missions originally designed to last three months. In an era of continuing budget uncertainty, we are at least getting the most out of our spacecraft!