Voyager 2 and the Edge of the Sun’s World

By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — June 15, 2026

Nearly half a century after launch, Voyager 2 continues to do what no other spacecraft can: tell us, directly and empirically, what exists beyond the Sun’s protective reach. Launched in 1977, Voyager 2 was designed for planetary flybys, not interstellar science. Yet after 45 years in flight, it has become one of humanity’s most important scientific witnesses — not because it is fast or powerful, but because it is still listening.

In November 2018, Voyager 2 crossed the heliopause, the boundary where the solar wind finally gives way to the interstellar medium. This moment marked only the second time a human-made object entered interstellar space. Unlike Voyager 1, however, Voyager 2 crossed that boundary with a functioning plasma instrument, allowing scientists to directly measure changes in particle density, magnetic fields, and turbulence as the Sun’s influence ended.

What Voyager 2 found immediately challenged long-standing assumptions. The heliosphere — often imagined as a smooth, rounded bubble — is neither smooth nor symmetrical. Instead, Voyager 2 detected abrupt changes in plasma density, compressed magnetic fields, and strong turbulence at the boundary. The edge of the solar system behaves less like a calm membrane and more like a stressed, distorted frontier, shaped by the Sun’s motion through the galaxy and by pressure from the surrounding interstellar environment.

One of the most significant findings involved plasma density itself. As Voyager 2 crossed into interstellar space, the density of charged particles increased sharply. This confirmed that the region beyond the heliosphere is not empty or inert. It is filled with thin but structured plasma, capable of transmitting shock waves and oscillations across vast distances. These measurements allowed scientists to calculate, for the first time with precision, the density of matter between the stars.

Voyager 2 also detected what can loosely be described as sound. While sound waves as humans understand them require air, plasma oscillations propagate through charged particles in a comparable way. Changes in electron density move as waves through interstellar plasma, and Voyager 2 recorded these oscillations as variations in electric charge. This transformed interstellar space from an abstract concept into a measurable, dynamic environment.

Magnetic field data revealed another surprise. The interstellar magnetic field outside the heliosphere aligns closely with the Sun’s magnetic field at the boundary. This suggests that the heliosphere is not merely expanding outward under solar pressure, but is also constrained and shaped by the galaxy itself. The solar system exists inside a larger magnetic structure, interacting continuously with forces far beyond the planets.

Radiation levels beyond the heliopause also rose sharply. Inside the heliosphere, the solar wind acts as a partial shield against high-energy cosmic rays. Outside it, Voyager 2 recorded significantly increased cosmic radiation. This finding has direct implications for future deep-space missions. Any attempt at sustained human travel beyond the heliosphere will face a radiation environment far harsher than previously assumed, with serious consequences for both human health and spacecraft electronics.

Remarkably, Voyager 2 continues to transmit data despite extreme limitations. Powered by a weakening radioisotope generator, the spacecraft now operates only a few instruments at a time. Its transmitter uses only a few watts of power, and its signal takes roughly 19 hours to reach Earth. Each data packet received represents a deliberate trade-off between preserving instruments and maintaining communication.

The broader significance of Voyager 2 lies not in any single measurement, but in what those measurements collectively reveal. Interstellar space is active, structured, and hostile. The boundary of the Sun’s influence is unstable and shaped by external forces. Our solar system is not an isolated island drifting peacefully through the galaxy; it is embedded in a dynamic, pressurized environment that pushes back.

Voyager 2’s mission is nearing its end. Within the next few years, power constraints will silence its remaining instruments, and eventually its transmitter as well. When that happens, the spacecraft will continue onward, mute but intact, carrying a record of its journey.

Voyager 2 has already replaced speculation with measurement. It has shown where the Sun’s world ends, and how rough the universe becomes immediately beyond it.

National Aeronautics and Space Administration. (2019). Voyager 2 enters interstellar space. NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory. https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/voyager/voyager-2-enters-interstellar-space.html

National Aeronautics and Space Administration. (2020). Voyager mission overview. NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory. https://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/

Stone, E. C., Cummings, A. C., McDonald, F. B., Heikkila, B. C., Lal, N., & Webber, W. R. (2019). Voyager 2 observations of the heliopause and interstellar medium. Nature Astronomy, 3, 1013–1018. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-019-0928-3

Burlaga, L. F., Ness, N. F., & Richardson, J. D. (2019). Magnetic fields at the heliopause. Nature Astronomy, 3, 1007–1012. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-019-0907-8

Gurnett, D. A., Kurth, W. S., Burlaga, L. F., & Ness, N. F. (2013). In situ observations of interstellar plasma with Voyager 1. Science, 341(6153), 1489–1492. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1241681

National Research Council. (2011). Solar and space physics: A science for a technological society. National Academies Press. https://doi.org/10.17226/13060

#cosmicRadiation #deepSpaceExploration #heliopause #heliosphere #interstellarMedium #interstellarSpace #nasa #solarSystemBoundary #spaceScience #Voyager2
Voyager 1 is still transmitting from beyond the heliosphere on 22 watts — less power than the bulb in your hallway — and the engineers who built it in the 1970s never expected we'd still be listening half a century later.

On 17 April 2026, mission engineers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California sent commands to switch off the Low-energy Charged Particles experiment aboard Voyager 1. The instrument had been operating, almost without interruption, since the spacecraft left Cape Canaveral in September 1977. The shutdown was not a fault. It was the latest in a […]

Space Daily

The Sun is larger than you might think

https://peertube.gravitywell.xyz/w/qmaokxKak7AexjMcYK5DHz

The Sun is larger than you might think

PeerTube

NASA begins mission to map the boundaries of our heliosphere

https://misryoum.com/us/space/nasa-begins-mission-to-map-the-boundaries-of/

A NASA probe has started its mission to map the heliosphere, which is a huge protective bubble around the solar system that was created by the sun, the space agency announced on Monday.The space agency's Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration...

#NASA #begins #mission #map #the #boundaries #our #heliosphere #US_News_Hub #misryoum_com

NASA begins mission to map the boundaries of our heliosphere

A NASA probe has started its mission to map the heliosphere, which is a huge protective bubble around the solar system that was created by the sun, the

US News Hub
E X O S C O P E - H E L I O S P H E R E

YouTube
Ion-Scale Wave Emission and Absorption for Non-Maxwellian Velocity Distributions in the Inner #Heliosphere: https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2025GL118809 -> U of A researchers unravel mysteries of the solar wind: https://news.arizona.edu/news/kissing-sun-u-researchers-unravel-mysteries-solar-wind

#ListeningTo IMAP and the shape of the heliosphere, The Planetary Society - Planetary Radio: Space Exploration,
Astronomy and Science, on Oktiv

#heliosphere #planetarySociety

#Followerpower
In 2024, Opher et al published a paper in which they describe how from a few million years ago, a cold hydrogen cloud started to traverse the solar system https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-024-02279-8

Here's an app from the authors:
https://faun.rc.fas.harvard.edu/czucker/Paper_Figures/Interactive_LxCC.html
The cloud dented the #heliosphere and so, exposed Earth to more incoming cosmic rays. And its hydrogen probably did stuff to the ozone layer too, and maybe to the methane concentration.
Huge impacts on #climate.

My question is, can #astrophotography still capture this cloud? What would it look like, photos with more blue tint than photos taken away from the cloud?
I'd imagine, it would be visible only seasonally, given how its location is now "to the left" of the sun.

I would love to search on Astrobin if I only knew how to translate the cloud position today to #deepsky objects.

Can you help?
#Astronomy #Astronomie #telescope #deepskyobject

A possible direct exposure of the Earth to the cold dense interstellar medium 2–3 Myr ago - Nature Astronomy

Modelling suggests that the Solar System may have passed through a cold dense cloud 2–3 Myr ago, in agreement with geological evidence from 60Fe and 244Pu isotopes, putting Earth in direct contact with the dense interstellar medium with potentially substantial impacts on its climate.

Nature