NASA
probe nearing close encounter with unexplored Pluto
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[April 16, 2015]
By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - The first spacecraft to visit distant
Pluto, a dwarf planet in the solar system’s frozen backyard, is still
three months away from a close encounter, but already in viewing range,
newly released photos show.
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The New Horizons probe blasted off from Florida in January 2006
for a 3-billion-mile (5-billion-km) journey to the Kuiper Belt
region of the solar system located beyond Neptune.
During that time, Pluto once known as the ninth planet in the solar
system, was demoted to dwarf planet status after the discovery of
similar icy bodies in eccentric, distant orbits around the sun.
New Horizons will pass about 7,750 miles(12,500 km) from Pluto’s
surface on July 14.
With a diameter of just 1,430 miles (2,302 km) – roughly two-thirds
the size of Earth’s moon – Pluto still looks like a bright dot in
color images released by NASA on Tuesday.
For now, the pictures have more value to engineers than scientists.
They are serving as a road map for control teams to tweak New
Horizon’s approach.
The spacecraft does not have the fuel for a braking burn to put
itself into orbit around Pluto. Rather, like the Voyager
explorations in the late 1970s and 1980s, New Horizons will make its
observations on the fly.
“Our team has worked hard to get to this point, and we know we have
just one shot to make this work,” Alice Bowman, New Horizons mission
operations manager at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics
Laboratory, said in a statement.
“We’ve plotted out each step of the Pluto encounter, practiced it
over and over, and we’re excited the ‘real deal’ is finally here.”
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After close-up studies of Pluto, its primary moon, Charon, and
entourage of at least four smaller moons, New Horizons will continue
speeding out into the Kuiper Belt, a region peppered with what are
believed to be frozen remnants from the formation of the solar
system some 4.6 billion years ago.
The team plans to petition NASA for additional funds for a flyby of
a second Kuiper Belt object in 2019.
In addition to its cameras, the spacecraft is outfitted with six
scientific instruments, including light-splitting spectrometers, and
plasma and dust detectors, to study the geology of Pluto and Charon,
map their surface compositions and temperatures and look for an
atmosphere, ring system and other moons.
(Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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