After three billion miles and a decade-long journey through our
solar system, NASA’s New Horizons Spacecraft has finally reached Pluto.
New Horizons made its closest approach at a distance of roughly 7,750
miles above the surface, making it the first-ever space mission to
explore a world so far from Earth.
“I’m delighted at this latest accomplishment by NASA, another first
that demonstrates once again how the United States leads the world in
space,” said John Holdren, assistant to the President for Science and
Technology and director of the White House Office of Science and
Technology Policy. “New Horizons is the latest in a long line of
scientific accomplishments at NASA, including multiple missions orbiting
and exploring the surface of Mars in advance of human visits still to
come; the remarkable Kepler mission to identify Earth-like planets
around stars other than our own; and the DSCOVR satellite that soon will
be beaming back images of the whole Earth in near real-time from a
vantage point a million miles away. As New Horizons completes its flyby
of Pluto and continues deeper into the Kuiper Belt, NASA’s multifaceted
journey of discovery continues.”
“The exploration of Pluto and its moons by New Horizons represents
the capstone event to 50 years of planetary exploration by NASA and the
United States,” said NASA Administrator Charles Bolden. “Once again we
have achieved a historic first. The United States is the first nation to
reach Pluto, and with this mission has completed the initial survey of
our solar system, a remarkable accomplishment that no other nation can
match.”
Per the plan, the spacecraft currently is in data-gathering mode and
not in contact with flight controllers at the Johns Hopkins University
Applied Physical Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland. Scientists are
waiting to find out whether New Horizons “phones home,” transmitting to
Earth a series of status updates that indicate the spacecraft survived
the flyby and is in good health. The “call” is expected shortly after 9
p.m. tonight.
The Pluto story began only a generation ago when young Clyde Tombaugh
was tasked to look for Planet X, theorized to exist beyond the orbit of
Neptune. He discovered a faint point of light that we now see as a
complex and fascinating world.
“Pluto was discovered just 85 years ago by a farmer’s son from
Kansas, inspired by a visionary from Boston, using a telescope in
Flagstaff, Arizona,” said John Grunsfeld, associate administrator for
NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington. “Today, science takes a
great leap observing the Pluto system up close and flying into a new
frontier that will help us better understand the origins of the solar
system.”
New Horizons’ flyby of the dwarf planet and its five known moons is
providing an up-close introduction to the solar system’s Kuiper Belt, an
outer region populated by icy objects ranging in size from boulders to
dwarf planets. Kuiper Belt objects, such as Pluto, preserve evidence
about the early formation of the solar system.
New Horizons principal investigator Alan Stern of the Southwest
Research Institute (SwRI) in Boulder, Colorado, says the mission now is
writing the textbook on Pluto.
“The New Horizons team is proud to have accomplished the first
exploration of the Pluto system,” Stern said. “This mission has inspired
people across the world with the excitement of exploration and what
humankind can achieve.”
New Horizons’ almost 10-year, three-billion-mile journey to closest
approach at Pluto took about one minute less than predicted when the
craft was launched in January 2006. The spacecraft threaded the needle
through a 36-by-57 mile (60 by 90 kilometers) window in space — the
equivalent of a commercial airliner arriving no more off target than the
width of a tennis ball.
Because New Horizons is the fastest spacecraft ever launched –
hurtling through the Pluto system at more than 30,000 mph, a collision
with a particle as small as a grain of rice could incapacitate the
spacecraft. Once it reestablishes contact Tuesday night, it will take 16
months for New Horizons to send its cache of data – 10 years’ worth —
back to Earth.
New Horizons is the latest in a long line of scientific
accomplishments at NASA, including multiple rovers exploring the surface
of Mars, the Cassini spacecraft that has revolutionized our
understanding of Saturn and the Hubble Space Telescope, which recently
celebrated its 25th anniversary. All of this scientific research and
discovery is helping to inform the agency’s plan to send American
astronauts to Mars in the 2030’s.
“After nearly 15 years of planning, building, and flying the New
Horizons spacecraft across the solar system, we’ve reached our goal,”
said project manager Glen Fountain at APL “The bounty of what we’ve
collected is about to unfold.”
Source: NASA
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