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Home Science & Technology Science

NASA’s New Horizons spaceship starts 6-month approach to Pluto

byCustoms Today Report
16/01/2015
in Science, Science & Technology
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WASHINGTON: New Horizons spacecraft Thursday officially began its six-month approach to Pluto, with the first close-up flyby scheduled for July 14, US space agency NASA said.

After a voyage of nine years covering 4.8 billion km (3 billion miles), the piano-sized probe awoke from its final hibernation period in early December for the encounter, and Thursday, several science instruments on board, including a space-dust detector, were activated, Xinhua reported.

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“We’ve completed the longest journey any craft has flown from Earth to reach its primary target, and we are ready to begin exploring!” Alan Stern, New Horizons’ principal investigator from Southwest Research Institute, said in a statement.

According to the space agency, the photo shoot of the Pluto system using the probe’s Long-Range Reconnaissance Imager will begin Jan 25.

The pictures will not only help mission scientists understand the dynamics of Pluto’s moons, but also play a critical role in navigating the probe as it covers the remaining 220 million km (135 million miles) to the dwarf planet, NASA said.

“We need to refine our knowledge of where Pluto will be when New Horizons flies past it,” said Mark Holdridge, the New Horizons’ encounter mission manager from Johns Hopkins University.

“The flyby timing also has to be exact, because the computer commands that will orient the spacecraft and point the science instruments are based on precisely knowing the time we pass Pluto which these images will help us determine.”

The probe’s instruments will also measure the high-energy particles streaming from the sun and dust-particle concentrations in the inner reaches of the Kuiper Belt, the unexplored outer region of the solar system that includes Pluto and potentially thousand of similar icy, rocky small planets.

Tags: Alan Sternflyby over PlutoHorizons spaceshipLong-Range Reconnaissance ImagerNASA's new Horizons spaceship probe begins flybyNew Horizons' principalsix-month approach to PlutoSouthwest Research Institute

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