Posted on 12/02/2018 8:47:33 PM PST by Simon Green
Act Two of the 12-year-old New Horizons mission to Pluto and the solar systems icy Kuiper Belt is heating up, with less than a month to go before NASAs piano-sized spacecraft makes historys farthest-out close encounter with a celestial object.
The New Years flyby of a mysterious Kuiper Belt object (or objects) known as Ultima Thule (UL-ti-ma THOO-lee) follows up on the missions first act, which hit a climax three years ago with a history-making flyby of Pluto.
Launched in 2006, New Horizons was never meant to be a one-shot deal. Even before the Pluto flyby, mission managers used the Hubble Space Telescope to identify its next quarry, a billion miles farther out in the Kuiper Belt. Now its crunch time for New Horizons principal investigator Alan Stern and his team.
Again.
This flyby is a lot harder than Pluto, Stern said. Ultima is tiny, and faint, much harder to navigate on. Another difficulty, or challenge, really, is that were farther away, and that means communication times are longer. Bit rates are lower.
Today the team beamed out commands to fine-tune New Horizons trajectory using the spacecrafts navigational thrusters (which, by the way, were built at Aerojet Rocketdynes facility in Redmond, Wash.). It took more than six hours for the commands to reach the probe at the speed of light, at a rate of 1,000 bits per second.
By the time mission managers get confirmation that their commands have been executed (or not), New Horizons will have traveled hundreds of thousands of miles farther on its path (or off its path).
Its a one-shot, get it right or go home deal, because theres no U-turn to go back and have a re-do. You have to plan every chess move with the spacecraft more carefully, said Stern, a planetary scientist at the Southwest Research Institute.
Dozens of scientists and engineers are due to converge on Johns Hopkins Universitys Applied Physics Laboratory in Maryland to get set for the flyby, which is scheduled to come closest to Ultima Thule at 12:33 a.m. ET Jan. 1 (9:33 p.m. PT Dec. 31).
If all goes according to plan, New Horizons will pass by Ultima at a distance of 2,200 miles, or less than a third of the distance used for the Pluto flyby, But the mission team is on the watch for any mini-moons that would force a shift to a safer, more distant trajectory.
During a recent rehearsal, the team had to cope with a worst-case scenario in which New Horizons spotted 11 satellites in Ultimas vicinity. It was just flying into a hornets nest, Stern recalled.
Neither Stern nor anyone else knows exactly what New Horizons will actually see.
We dont know what a primordial, ancient, perfectly preserved object like Ultima is, because no ones ever been to something like this, Stern explained. Its terra incognita. It is pure exploration. Well just see what its all about if its got rings, if its got a swarm of satellites.
The Hubble imagery suggests that Ultima Thule (also known as 2014 MU69) measures roughly 20 miles wide and might consist of two or more mutually orbiting objects. The dearth of knowledge leaves plenty of room for surprises.
Considering how much we knew about Pluto, and how much it astounded us, here were starting from complete scratch, Stern said. We barely know its size and its color. We cant tell you anything about its composition or its atmosphere, or satellites, any of that. But were going to find out. To find out, the plutonium-powered New Horizons probe will employ the same suite of scientific instruments that worked so well to study Pluto and its moons more than three years earlier.
New Horizons long-range camera, known as LORRI, currently sees Ultima as a mere speck, but it should be able to make out its shape starting a few days before the flyby. During the closest phase of the encounter, LORRI could detect features as small as the boats floating on the lake in New Yorks Central Park, Stern said.
New Horizons will make use of an ultraviolet imager called Alice and an infrared and visible-light imaging spectrometer called Ralph to characterize Ultimas composition. A radio science experiment will take its temperature, and other instruments will analyze particles in Ultimas cosmic neighborhood.
Its likely to take months to send back all the data from the Ultima flyby, just as it did in the wake of 2015s Pluto flyby. But eventually, Act Two of the New Horizons mission is expected to add to Act Ones already-substantial record of revelations about the icy worlds on the solar systems edge.
Will there be an Act Three? Stern said he and his colleagues fully intend to ask NASA for another mission extension once Ultima is behind them.
He noted that at its current speed, New Horizons will be flying through the Kuiper Belt for almost a decade longer.
Were going to look for another flyby target, and were going to continue to observe Kuiper Belt objects with the telescopes on board, he said. If NASA approves that, there will be a third act.
I'm amazed the spacecraft can receive at that bandwidth, given the incredible distance.
Remarkable technology.
Grand or spinet?
SO.... by this time they should know if they were successful. Any news on that ?
Further, the probe went into "safe mode" less than a week before Pluto's flyby - the team kept their cool and made the flyby work flawlessly...AND they aren't afraid to wave the American flag.
Amazing!! And NASA must certainly be boosting Muslims egos
It doesn't get there until Jan. 1st. We'll know later that day.
Very interesting vid describing many of New Horizons’ discoveries @ Pluto. I don’t think any Sci-Fi writer even imagined so much there...
Very interesting vid describing many of New Horizons’ discoveries @ Pluto. I don’t think any Sci-Fi writer even imagined so much there...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6l4kr36TzQ4
It’s exciting to see something get that far out there. Thanks for the news!
Desktop digital, of course
That quip aside, this whole thing is amazing.
Odd how many Sci-Fi books I have read recently have the Kuiper belt objects as part of the plot.
Cool as hell.
Let’s make it a planet.
Although Pluto lost its lofty place in the sky as a planet, as an element it has the higher honor. Long after mankind has moved to other stars that element will retain that name . That Plutonium powered the first visit to Pluto highlights the honor!
Two NASA Missions to Study Small Worlds
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyQp5tckyEw
https://i.ytimg.com/vi/MyQp5tckyEw/maxresdefault.jpg
That’s a cool bit of trivia.
We’ve been watching astronomer Spike Psarris videos on astronomy on YouTube. Amazing information!
In the 1930 or so movie, “Ultima Thule” was the term the Romans used for the Scottish island of St. Kilda. “The edge of the world.”
piano-sized spacecraft
Grand or spinet?
Weigha in just under 900 lbs (401 kg)
instrument package weighs only 30 kg (~70 lbs)
Amazing can receive data at that distance
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