It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
The burn was the first maneuver of New Horizons' Pluto approach phase, which began in January. The trajectory correction should delay the spacecraft's arrival in the Pluto system by 14 minutes and 30 seconds.
"It will also shift the course 'sideways' (if looking from Earth) by 3,442 kilometers (2,139 miles) by July 14, sending the spacecraft toward a desired flyby close-approach target point," mission officials wrote in an update. "The shift was based on the latest orbit predictions of Pluto and its largest moon Charon, estimated from various sources, including optical-navigation images of the Pluto system taken by New Horizons in January and February...
...The spacecraft will come within about 8,500 miles (13,600 km) of Pluto's surface at its closest approach on July 14. But New Horizons won't linger; it will zoom right past Pluto, speeding out farther into the Kuiper Belt, the ring of icy bodies beyond Neptune's orbit."
The New Horizons probe, which will zoom through the Pluto system on July 14, fired its engines for 93 seconds on Tuesday (March 10), when it was about 3 billion miles (4.83 billion kilometers) from Earth. No spacecraft had ever conducted an engine burn at so great a distance from its handlers, New Horizons principal investigator Alan Stern said.
"Today's engine burn by New Horizons set an ALL TIME record for the most distant by ANY spacecraft in history!" Stern, who's based at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, tweeted Tuesday via the account @NewHorizons2015.
NAS A’s Hubble Telescope Finds Potential Kuiper Belt Targets for New Horizons Pluto Mission
Peering out to the dim, outer reaches of our solar system, NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has uncovered three Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs) the agency’s New Horizons spacecraft could potentially visit after it flies by Pluto in July 2015....
...The New Horizons team expects to submit such a proposal to NASA in late 2016 for an extended mission to fly by one of the newly identified KBOs. Hurtling across the solar system, the New Horizons spacecraft would reach the distance of 4 billion miles from the sun at its farthest point roughly three to four years after its July 2015 Pluto encounter. Accomplishing such a KBO flyby would substantially increase the science return from the New Horizons mission as laid out by the 2003 Planetary Science Decadal Survey.
originally posted by: Anyafaj
a reply to: Soylent Green Is People
Is Pluto back to being a planet again? They keep changing it up on me, so I'm not sure anymore. I'm only interested if my Pluto is a planet once again. LOL
Nope -- still a dwarf planet. Sorry
originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
originally posted by: Anyafaj
a reply to: Soylent Green Is People
Is Pluto back to being a planet again? They keep changing it up on me, so I'm not sure anymore. I'm only interested if my Pluto is a planet once again. LOL
Nope -- still a dwarf planet. Sorry
It's been that way since 2006, a change prompted by the discovery of Eris -- which is another Kuiper Belt object that is even larger than Pluto. If Pluto was still the 9th planet, then Eris would be the 10th planet. There would be some who'd even Sedna could be called a planet.
originally posted by: intrptr
a reply to: Soylent Green Is People
Nope -- still a dwarf planet. Sorry
Too far, too small, too cold doth not a planet make? Or because its only one of many other bodies we discovered-- 'late'?
Thanks for the update. I heard it said that hitting these planets with our probes was like sinking a hole in one with a golf ball hit from Los Angeles to New York.
Yah, a golf ball with retro rockets.
ETA: Still a hella shot, considering…
originally posted by: intrptr
originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
That "helical orbits" video is misleading, and is only from the point of view of someone who is not moving along with the solar system.
originally posted by: ngchunter
originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
That "helical orbits" video is misleading, and is only from the point of view of someone who is not moving along with the solar system.
It's not only misleading, it's outright wrong; Djsadhu's video shows the planets "trailing behind" the sun. He makes this point explicitly in his second video of that series:
That "helical orbits" video is misleading, and is only from the point of view of someone who is not moving along with the solar system.
originally posted by: Mogget
Total failure of the spacecraft should be the only reason why an extended mission to several additional KBOs should not be undertaken. The science return of such an endeavour would be enormous.
Conversely, range residuals statistically compatible with zero having an amplitude of 10 m would imply that PX, if it exists, could not be located at less than about 4,500 au (mX=0.7m⊕) or 60,000 au (mX=5mJ)
originally posted by: ngchunter
a reply to: Soylent Green Is People
An additional benefit of extending the mission for about 6 years would be the ability to set very tight constraints on the mass/distance of any would-be "planet X."
Conversely, range residuals statistically compatible with zero having an amplitude of 10 m would imply that PX, if it exists, could not be located at less than about 4,500 au (mX=0.7m⊕) or 60,000 au (mX=5mJ)
arxiv.org...
originally posted by: Box of Rain
originally posted by: ngchunter
a reply to: Soylent Green Is People
An additional benefit of extending the mission for about 6 years would be the ability to set very tight constraints on the mass/distance of any would-be "planet X."
Conversely, range residuals statistically compatible with zero having an amplitude of 10 m would imply that PX, if it exists, could not be located at less than about 4,500 au (mX=0.7m⊕) or 60,000 au (mX=5mJ)
arxiv.org...
What if Planet X were on the other side of the solar system (on the opposite side of the Sun) relative to the trajectory of New Horizons? I assume any planet out that far would take a few hundred years to orbit the Sun, so would it ever get close enough to new Horizons to have any noticeable effect?
Or am I misunderstanding the methods by which they envisage being able to detect signs of its existence/parameters of its orbit?
Source:
The newly named objects are 2014 MT69, a 37-mile (60-km) wide body circling some 44.3 times farther away from the sun than Earth. An encounter with MT69 would occur around New Year's Day 2019.
"It's not a terribly bright target and it's not very big … and it's quite possibly smaller, if it's a binary or if other things are going on," said astronomer and New Horizons team member Simon Porter, with the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo.
The advantage of MT69 is that New Horizons can reach it using less fuel. The encounter also would occur three months sooner than a flyby of the other candidate, known as 2014 MT70.
MT70 is brighter than MT60, and possibly larger, with a diameter of about 47 miles (76 km), so more desirable from a scientific perspective, Porter said.