Friday, September 4, 2015

NEWS: New Horizons spacecraft reaches Pluto!



The spacecraft called “New Horizons” that launched from Earth in 2006 finally reached Pluto This summer—in July of 2015! Traveling more than 3 billion miles to Pluto took 9 ½ years. The closest New Horizons will get to Pluto is 7,750 miles. Its mission is to gather information—photos, measurements, and more—about Pluto and send it back to Earth where scientists can study it.

This is one of the first images New Horizons sent back to us. It is a combination of several images taken when the spacecraft was 280,000 miles away from Pluto. More pictures and other information will continue to be transmitted back to earth over the next year.
Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute
 Some say that Pluto may be home to a hazy atmosphere, nitrogen glaciers and possibly even an underground ocean.






ABOUT New Horizons
The New Horizons spacecraft weighs 1054 lbs. A Mini Cooper weighs more than twice that!
Traveling at more than 750,000 miles per day, it is the fastest spacecraft to ever leave Earth’s orbit. Scientists took advantage of the gravitational pull of other planets like Jupiter to "slingshot" New Horizons forward on its journey.
Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute
Information is sent to Earth through radio signals that take a long time to travel to Earth. There are 7 instruments on board (see diagram above) that take pictures or measurements or even samples and send information back to Earth.


ABOUT Pluto
First seen in 1930 through a telescope by an American named Clyde Tombaugh, this icy cold dwarf planet is further away than the planets Neptune and Uranus in our solar system and is located in the Kuiper belt.

Pluto has five known moons—Charon (discovered in 1978), Nix and Hydra (2005), Styx (2011), and Kerberos (2012)—and takes 248 ½ years (Earth years) to complete its orbit around our sun. 

Vocabulary to look up: solar system, orbit, kuiper belt, dwarf planet, gravity assist or slingshot

LEARN MORE:


Pluto.jhuapl.edu



Kidsastronomy.co

Planetsforkids.org




http://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/theres-flowing-ice-on-pluto-180956071/?no-ist

No comments:

Post a Comment