NASA artist's version of New Horizons probe leaving earth (2006) enroute to planet Pluto. NASA'S probe is currently traveling at one million miles per day and its ETA is July, 2015. |
COUNTDOWN TO PLUTO
GUEST BLOG--By Dr. Tony
Phillips, Science@NASA--
One of the fastest spacecraft ever built -- NASA's New Horizons -- is hurtling
through the void at nearly one million miles per day. Launched in 2006, it has been in flight
longer than some missions last, and it is nearing its destination: Pluto.
“The
encounter begins this month,” says Alan Stern, of the Southwest Research
Institute and the mission’s principal investigator. “But for the big event, we’re less than half a year
away.”
Closest approach
is scheduled for July 2015 when New Horizons flies only 10,000 km from Pluto,
but the spacecraft will be busy long before that date. The first step, in January 2015, is an
intensive campaign of photography by the Long Range Reconnaissance Imager or
“LORRI.” This will help mission
controllers pinpoint Pluto's location, which is uncertain by a few thousand
kilometers.
"LORRI
will photograph the planet against known background star fields," explains
Stern. "We’ll use the images to refine Pluto’s distance from the
spacecraft, and then fire the engines to make any necessary corrections.”
At first,
Pluto and its large moon Charon will be little more than distant pinpricks—“a
couple of fat pixels,” says Stern--but soon they will swell into full-fledged
worlds.
By late
April 2015, the approaching spacecraft will be taking pictures of Pluto that
surpass the best images from Hubble. By
closest approach in July 2015, a whole new world will open up to the
spacecraft’s cameras. If New Horizons flew over Earth at the same altitude, it
could see individual buildings and their shapes.
Stern is
looking forward to one of the most exciting moments of the Space Age. “Humankind
hasn't had an experience like this--an encounter with a new planet--in a long
time,” he says. “Everything we see on
Pluto will be a revelation.”
An artist's concept of the New Horizons spacecraft at Pluto. |
He likens
New Horizons to Mariner 4, which flew past Mars in July 1965. At the time, many people on Earth, even some
scientists, thought the Red Planet was a relatively gentle world, with water and
vegetation friendly to life. Instead, Mariner 4 revealed a desiccated wasteland
of haunting beauty. New Horizons’ flyby
of Pluto will occur almost exactly 50 years after Mariner 4’s flyby of Mars—and
it could shock observers just as much.
Other than a
few indistinct markings seen from afar by Hubble, Pluto’s landscape is totally
unexplored. Although some astronomers call Pluto a “dwarf” planet, Stern says
there’s nothing small about it. “If you
drove a car around the equator of Pluto, the odometer would rack up almost
5,000 miles—as far as from Manhattan to Moscow.” Such a traveler might
encounter icy geysers, craters, clouds, mountain ranges, rilles and valleys,
alongside alien landforms no one has ever imagined.
“There is a
real possibility that New Horizons will discover new moons and rings as well,”
says Stern.
Yes, Pluto
could have rings. Already, Pluto has
five known moons: Charon, Styx, Nix, Kerberos, and Hydra. Numerical simulations
show that meteoroids striking those satellites could send debris into orbit,
forming a ring system that waxes and wanes over time in response to changes in
bombardment.
“We’re
flying into the unknown,” says Stern, “and there is no telling what we might
find.”
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