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Pluto New Horizons

Viewing Posts from June 2016

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    A World Beyond Pluto: Finding a New Target for New Horizons

    The left image shows thin swirls of bright golden material flowing off the Sun's surface. The outline of a white box is over a speckled area of the surface, in gray and bright gold. On the right, is that area in different wavelengths. The image is purple, black, red, orange, and right yellow. In the highlighted area, the speckles are a very bright yellow with some cooler purple areas.

    Today's post is written by Alex Parker, a research scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, working on NASA's New Horizons mission. Pluto and its moons are the most distant worlds ever visited by any of humanity's robotic explorers, but for how much longer will that remain true? New Horizons is outbound through …

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    New Horizons: Getting to Know a KBO

    The four observations of 1994 JR1 that New Horizons made in November 2015. The KBO is the dot in the center, and the stars are moving past in the background. Credits: NASA/JHU APL/SwRI

    Today's post is written by Simon Porter, a New Horizons postdoctoral researcher at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado. Simon's work focuses on the small satellites of Pluto. Hi, I'm Simon Porter, a postdoctoral researcher on NASA's New Horizons mission. In this blog post, I'm going to talk about our observations of the Kuiper …

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    Rewriting the Playbook on Pluto

    Book cover Pluto and Charon

    Richard Binzel is a professor of planetary science and joint professor of aerospace engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, as well as a member of the original "Pluto Underground" that struggled for more than two decades to bring a Pluto mission from dream to reality. Through all the years of planning and conducting the …

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    Processing Pluto’s Pictures

    Pluto's moons

    This week's blog comes from Tod Lauer, a research astrophysicist at the National Optical Astronomy Observatory in Tucson, Arizona. New Horizons Principal Investigator: "Lauer! We've got to have full resolution! Now!" Me: "I'm pushing the images as hard as I can – any more and the pixels will blow apart for sure!" Okay, the New …

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