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Five Years and Counting Down
Catch the Mission PI on ‘The Space Show’
New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern is the scheduled guest today on “The Space Show” – catch the live ‘cast from 5 – 6:30 pm EDT. Dr. Stern will discuss the New Horizons mission, suborbital research opportunities and other topics. Visit www.thespaceshow.com for more information on the program and how to listen online.
Principal Investigator Alan Stern leads a mission team that includes the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Southwest Research Institute, Ball Aerospace Corporation, the Boeing Company, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Stanford University, KinetX, Inc., Lockheed Martin Corporation, University of Colorado, the U.S. Department of Energy, and a number of other firms, NASA centers and university partners.
Where Is the New Horizons Centaur Stage?
A NASA Pluto probe may be slumbering at the moment, but it's still tearing through space at a blistering pace, closing in on the orbit of Uranus.
The New Horizons probe is the fastest spacecraft ever launched from Earth, having sped from its home planet in 2006 at about 36,000 mph (nearly 58,000 kph). It had covered half the distance of its nearly 3 billion-mile (4.8 billion-kilometers) voyage by last February, and the spacecraft should reach Pluto in July 2015.
Currently, New Horizons is about 18.5 times farther from the sun than the Earth is, and it should pass the orbit of Uranus in March 2011, NASA officials said.
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In recent years, a number of revelations have come out regarding Pluto from the Hubble Space Telescope, such as the discovery of Nix and Hydra, as well as apparent geyser eruptions and seasonal color changes on the dwarf planet.
"These discoveries have helped develop our encounter with Pluto, which is now fully planned," said New Horizons principal investigator Alan Stern of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo. "We have a list of things of do, which has been converted into a timeline of events, which has been converted into spacecraft software with all the commands to run the spacecraft and instruments."
New Horizons "is very different from most missions in the solar system today," Stern told SPACE.com. "It's like we're back at the early days of planetary exploration."
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"With New Horizons, this is our first reconnaissance of Pluto, of this kind of world — we've never sent a mission to the dwarf planets before, never sent a mission to the Kuiper Belt," Stern said. "This is the first time we're going to see a new type of planet since the '70s, when we had our first mission to a giant planet, Jupiter."
Pluto and the Kuiper Belt remain mysterious in many ways, and New Horizons should help fill in some major gaps, Stern said.
"So we don't have a narrow scope here — we're going to write the book on Pluto and the dwarf planets," he said. "We're here to map Pluto, map its surface composition, measure its atmospheric composition, pressure and temperature and assay the same kinds of measurements for all of its satellites."
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"New Horizons is healthy," Stern said. "All systems and instruments are working well, and we have never had a case where we've had to use a backup system owing to a problem. We have good fuel reserves, too, and we're bang on course to Pluto."
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Frigid Pluto, home to some of our solar system's chilliest real estate, may well harbor an ocean beneath its miles-thick ice shell, new research suggests.
Despite its extreme cold, the dwarf planet still appears to be warm enough to "easily" have a subsurface ocean, according to a new model of the rate at which radioactive heat might still warm Pluto's core.
And that ocean wouldn't be a mere puddle, noted planetary scientist Guillaume Robuchon of the University of California, Santa Cruz.
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When the New Horizons spacecraft reaches Pluto in 2015, it should be easy to test whether Pluto actually has a subsurface ocean.
If there's no ocean, Pluto should be comparatively flattened at its poles, containing a "fossil" equatorial bulge left over from early in its history, when the body was spinning more rapidly.
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"We're making predictions," Nimmo said, "and will find out whether they're right or wrong when New Horizons gets there."
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Wanted: Kuiper Belt Targets
New Horizons team launches search for post-Pluto flyby prospects
April 20, 2011
The New Horizons team, working with astronomers using some of the largest telescopes on Earth, will begin searching this month for distant Kuiper Belt objects that the New Horizons spacecraft hopes to reconnoiter after completing its observations of the Pluto system in mid-2015.
No spacecraft has ever visited the Kuiper Belt, a distant, donut-shaped region of the solar system filled with small planets and comets that formed early in the solar system’s history.
While the main target for NASA’s New Horizons mission is Pluto and its three moons, New Horizons was built with post-Pluto Kuiper Belt object (KBO) flybys in mind.
"We have enough fuel on New Horizons, and there are enough Kuiper Belt objects out there, that we have a good chance of visiting at least one of them, probably one that's at least 50 kilometers [about 30 miles] across,” says New Horizons co-investigator John Spencer, of Southwest Research Institute, who is coordinating the search effort. “But first, we have to find them.”
Spencer cites two reasons why suitable target KBOs aren’t already known. First, they are likely to be more than 10,000 times fainter than Pluto — near the very limit of what large telescopes can detect. Second, by a twist of fate, the current location of objects that New Horizons can reach is superimposed on the dense star fields of the Milky Way’s center, in the constellation Sagittarius, which is the hardest region of the Kuiper Belt to search for faint KBOs.
“As a result, we have to conduct a special, dedicated search to find our target KBOs,” says New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern, also of the Southwest Research Institute. “And, because it will take two to three years to net a range of potential targets and refine their orbits and physical characteristics well enough to select the best one or two for New Horizons, we have long planned to begin this work in 2011, so we can have our targets selected and propose this extended mission to NASA before we get to Pluto.”
Fourth Moon Adds to Pluto's Appeal
July 20, 2011
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“Pluto continues to amaze us,” says Weaver, the New Horizons project scientist. “Who would have thought a dwarf planet could support such a complex satellite system? The hunt will now be on for similarly complex systems around other Kuiper Belt objects.”
Aside from giving the New Horizons team something to plan for and look forward to, the discovery offers a peek into Pluto’s violent past. “The discovery of this moon reinforces the idea that the Pluto system was formed during a massive collision 4.6 billion years ago,” says Weaver. “The smaller satellites, including this one, probably came together in the resulting debris disk.”
This discovery also suggests other small bodies may lurk in the Pluto system – and, if so, New Horizons should root them out when it flies by. But more “targets” might not be the best thing for the mission.“The discovery of P4 is exciting, but it also raises the possibility that our New Horizons spacecraft may enter a more hostile environment than we previously imagined,” says Glen Fountain, New Horizons project manager from APL.
“We don’t want our spacecraft running into any debris that’s still hanging around from the massive collision that spawned the formation of Pluto’s smaller satellites,” adds Stern. “For this reason we’re going to look with New Horizons, and even before we get there, we’ll be looking with Hubble and other tools, we hope.”
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