The solar wind streams off of the Sun
at a speed of several hundred km/s, creating a magnetized bubble of hot plasma around the Sun. This bubble is called the heliosphere, and
it is separated from the interstellar gas (local interstellar medium, LISM) by a
heliopause. Inside the heliopause a termination shock is created
to make the solar wind subsonic; the region between the shock and the heliopause is called
the helio-sheath. Helio-sheath is deformed because of the ambient flow of the interstellar
gas, forming a comet-like tail behind the Sun (see also magnetosphere).
The heliopause is believed to be at least 120 AU away from the Sun, i.e., all the
planets are located within it (Earth
and Pluto are 1 and 40 AU away, respectively).
The Voyager and Pioneer spacecraft will probably reach it in the early 2000's.
The interstallar medium surrounding us currently is of low density, and contains mainly neutral hydrogen. It has been estimated that as our Sun rotates around the galactic centre (T=200 million years) it will also hit regions with higher density and more molecular hydrogen. This could lead to modifications to the heliospheric structure, and changes in the cosmic ray fluxes.
See also