Brent said:
Did either of those probes take any pictures at all toward the edge of our solar system or past it?
Pictures of what? Space is huge and empty. It's not like the cartoons or bad movies where all the planets are conveniently in a straight line for a ship to go past. Once they passed the last planets they were targeted for, they never again got close enough to anything to resolve an image of it. At most, they could maybe have looked back at the Sun and taken a picture of it, but it would've just been a bright pinpoint.
There's also the question of how you define the edge of the Solar System. Beyond Neptune is the Kuiper Belt. Beyond that is the scattered disk, the Hills Cloud, and the Oort Cloud, all in orbit of the Sun and thus part of the Solar System, but stretching out to nearly a light year away in total.
One reasonable definition for the edge of the system is the heliopause, the region where the Sun's magnetic field and solar wind give way to the interstellar medium. Once the probes are in the ISM, they're technically in interstellar space, although they'd still have a long way to go before reaching the Oort Cloud. The
Voyagers are currently in the transitional zone, the heliosheath, and are expected to reach the interstellar medium within a decade or two. The
Pioneers haven't reached the heliosheath yet; in fact, P10 is heading down the "tail" of the Sun's magnetic field and thus won't be in the ISM for thousands of years.
Mark_Nguyen said:
The fun part about this is that many people who are caretakers of the Voyager probes by that time haven't even been BORN yet... Think of the legacy that creates, and that they'd be responsible for.
Like I said, the
Voyagers will run out of power in a decade or two and there will be nothing left to take care of. We'll be lucky if they even last long enough to send us any data on the ISM.
Fire said:
I think we should build a probe, send it to Neptune using solar sail technology and then make a slingshot maneuver around Neptune and using rockets and a huge onboard fuel reserve blast the probe out to the Kupier belt to study some Kupier belt objects, it could be powered by solar power up till it cant generate enough power and then power up a small nuclear reactor to power it the rest of the way.
We already have a probe en route to the Kuiper Belt.
New Horizons was launched in January '06 on a course for Pluto. It passed Jupiter about a year later and sent back some valuable data about Jupiter and its environs. Astronomers are already searching for other Kuiper Belt Objects close enough to the probe's course that it could be assigned to do flybys of them as well.