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Pluto New Horizons

Viewing Posts from July 2016

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    Commanding the Eyes of New Horizons

    New Horizons Ralph Instrument

    This New Horizons blog is a team effort between Cathy Olkin, the co-principal investigator of the New Horizons Ralph instrument, and Ralph instrument engineer Eddie Weigle. Just as it takes teamwork to fly a spacecraft to Pluto – even tasks like checking the commands that are sent to the spacecraft are done by a team …

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    Pluto: Preparing for the Perfect Alignment

    Earth and Moon transit the solar disk

    Today's blog is from Anne Verbiscer, a research associate professor in the Department of Astronomy at the University of Virginia. On the New Horizons science team she studies the scattering properties and composition of icy surfaces in the Pluto system and the Kuiper Belt. Every year, planets orbiting the sun beyond Earth's orbit reach what …

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    26 Years and 3 Billion Miles to Pluto

    Alan Stern and Fran Banenal

    Fran Bagenal is a research scientist at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University of Colorado, Boulder, who is working on the New Horizons mission to Pluto and the Juno mission to Jupiter. Her main area of expertise is the study of charged particles trapped in planetary magnetic fields. She remembers a …

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    From Canada to Pluto and Beyond

    Canada-France-Hawaii-Telescope and the Gemini North observatory

    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. Nature is a common theme in Canadian literature, with desolate, remote landscapes often playing a role. It should come as no surprise, then, that Canada had a hand in writing the …

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