It seems that Voyager II has had an early heliopause, running out of magnetism about 10% (a billion and a half kilometers!) earlier than Voyager I.
The implication is that our heliosphere and the heliopause around it are much more variable and flexible than was once thought.
“Well—” I feel impelled to ask —“after so much else astronomical has been found to be variable and different in recent weeks and months, why is this such a big surprise?”
We’ve recently found meteors and comets — and other spacey things — doing bundles of “impossible” stuff, all in defiance of official explanations.
Whooh!
Here’s a revolution: we’re expecting from dud concepts, so let’s change our official expectations! (-:
Too much politics and philosophy involved for it ever to be that simple, of course, but we won’t really know without a good, strong try.
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