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Just A Three Year Cruise Left Before Pluto Flyby
SPX ^ | Jan 20, 2012 | Alan Stern

Posted on 04/19/2012 12:23:56 PM PDT by robowombat

Just A Three Year Cruise Left Before Pluto Flyby by Alan Stern for PI Perspective Boulder CO (SPX) Jan 20, 2012

The data New Horizons sends back - maps, spectra, plasma data, radio science and more - will provide a detailed view of Pluto and its system of moons. Our knowledge of Pluto will literally expand from a single fact sheet's worth of information, to textbook-length tomes.

Today - as we mark the sixth anniversary of our launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, on January 19, 2006 - New Horizons remains healthy and on course, now more than 22 times as far from the Sun as the Earth is.

Our nine-year flight from launch to the beginning of Pluto encounter in January 2015 is two-thirds over. As a result, we're entering the final three-year segment of our long interplanetary trek from Earth to Pluto, called "Late Cruise."

Even as we enter Late Cruise, I can already feel the pace of activities picking up. As you read this, New Horizons is awake and being put through various test activities during a record-length, monthlong January hibernation wakeup, and all is going well. When this wakeup ends, we'll cruise in hibernation through February, March and April while planning an intensive two-month wakeup that will span May and June.

The highlight of this summer's wakeup will be a "24 hour" near-encounter rehearsal, during which we'll execute a (nearly) daylong segment of our Pluto encounter sequence on the spacecraft. During this test - our first in-flight encounter rehearsal - New Horizons will make every maneuver, every scan and every observation that it actually will do around closest approach in 2015.

Following that rehearsal, recorded engineering and science data will be played back to Earth and be used to search for even the tiniest discrepancies from plan.

In addition to the rehearsal, we'll check out every system (and its backup) on New Horizons; check out each of the seven scientific instruments; collect more science data than we have in any previous wakeup; and update the software for our primary spacecraft command and control computer, removing a bug that occasionally causes it to reset.

As if that's not enough, we'll also uplink almost two-dozen improvements to our onboard autonomous fault detection and automatic response software, many of which are necessary to begin encounter-sequence testing and to carry out the encounter itself. All of these activities need to go well to put us in good shape for a complete, nine-day encounter rehearsal in 2013.

Also this summer, planetary scientists on and collaborating with the New Horizons team will use a wide variety of telescopes to intensively probe the space between Pluto and Charon for possible satellites, rings and other kinds of debris structures.

And while the science team is looking for Pluto system hazards, our spacecraft engineering team, under the leadership of Chris Hersman from the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, will begin to work through some 260-plus malfunction and contingency scenarios that we've identified as possible "gotchas" at Pluto. For each scenario, the team will prepare and test automatic onboard or ground-control responses.

And our mission operations ("mission ops") team, led by Alice Bowman at APL, will complete plans for the two weeks of flight that surround either side of our nine-day-long closest approach sequence at Pluto.

Working with our Pluto Encounter Planning team, led by Deputy Project Scientist Leslie Young at Southwest Research Institute, the mission ops group will also prioritize and then write command sequences that create the almost-yearlong data playback that will occur after the encounter concludes in late summer 2015.

The data New Horizons sends back - maps, spectra, plasma data, radio science and more - will provide a detailed view of Pluto and its system of moons. Our knowledge of Pluto will literally expand from a single fact sheet's worth of information, to textbook-length tomes.

When we started this journey in January 2006, the nearly decade-long cruise to the Pluto system seemed daunting indeed. But with six years behind us, and only three years to go, we on New Horizons are actually worried about how little time we have to complete all that's left to do! After all, starting this year and carrying through 2013, 2014 and 2015, the pace of activity will continue to accelerate! Soon, we'll actually be hiring new staff to help us take on much of that work.


TOPICS: Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: pluto

1 posted on 04/19/2012 12:24:03 PM PDT by robowombat
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To: robowombat
Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
2 posted on 04/19/2012 12:29:47 PM PDT by cripplecreek (What does it profit a man if he gains the whole world but loses his soul?)
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To: KevinDavis

Ping!


3 posted on 04/19/2012 12:32:28 PM PDT by SunTzuWu
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To: robowombat
After all, starting this year and carrying through 2013, 2014 and 2015, the pace of activity will continue to accelerate!

I'm disappointed that this is just a fly by. The Cassini/Galileo missions provided years of monitoring.

Still, no other country in the world comes close to these acheivements.

This is the only spin-off from NASA with lasting value and a future.

4 posted on 04/19/2012 12:33:22 PM PDT by cicero2k
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To: robowombat

bookmark 4 l8tr


5 posted on 04/19/2012 12:33:29 PM PDT by swamprebel (Where liberty dwells, there is my country.)
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To: All


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6 posted on 04/19/2012 12:34:15 PM PDT by musicman (Until I see the REAL Long Form Vault BC, he's just "PRES__ENT" Obama = Without "ID")
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To: robowombat

so is it a planet or not?


7 posted on 04/19/2012 12:41:25 PM PDT by Buckeye McFrog
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To: cicero2k
Still, no other country in the world comes close to these acheivements.[sic]

Thanks to Hussein gutting NASA, this may be the last.

8 posted on 04/19/2012 12:41:39 PM PDT by The Sons of Liberty (Sworn to Defend The Constitution Against ALL Enemies, Foreign and Domestic. So Help Me GOD!)
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To: Buckeye McFrog
so is it a planet or not?

I think so. It was a major mistake to attempt to demote it to 'dwarf-planet' or whatever it is they are calling it now.

It will be great to have more than the hundred-pixel resolution photo we have of pluto currently. I can't wait to import the new skin into Celestia. I suspect, though, that visually it's not going to be a big shock. You never know though. Every single time we've gone to a planet for the 1st or second time have revolutionized how we percieved them.

Telescopes rock and all that, but there is no substitute for being there!

 

9 posted on 04/19/2012 1:58:12 PM PDT by zeugma (Those of us who work for a living are outnumbered by those who vote for a living.)
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To: cicero2k

Unfortunately, there are a number of factors preventing a Pluto orbiter. First, without a heavy lifter like the Saturn V, we cannot send a probe with enough fuel to slow down enough to orbit Pluto, especially given Pluto’s weak gravity The only way to do it with current technology is to take a long, circuitous route involving multiple planetary flybys and a decades-long trip.

Second, no matter how you slice it an orbiting mission is a longer trip than a flyby, so you need a better power source. We stopped producing plutonium years ago (New Horizons Pu is leftover from Cassini), so we would have to restart production for a new mission. (On a related note, roughly half of the dry mass of New Horizons is due to the PU RTG).

Third, you have to design a science payload to survive such a long mission. Yes, the Voyager payload lasted 12+ years, but baselining such a survival period means more money and time spent desiging and testing the instruments. Not saying it can’t be done, but it would take more money.

Speaking of money, when the Pluto flyby mission was first studied in the 1990s, the powers-that-be claimed it couldn’t be done for less than $1 billion in 1990s dollars. The 2006 cost of New Horizons is approximately $650 million including launch cost, development, and science operations through 2016.


10 posted on 04/19/2012 3:13:37 PM PDT by MikeD (We live in a world where babies are like velveteen rabbits that only become real if they are loved.)
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