Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jan 19, 2006 · New Horizons is a NASA mission to study the dwarf planet Pluto, its moons, and other objects in the Kuiper Belt, a region of the solar system that extends from about 30 AU, near the orbit of Neptune, to about 50 AU from the Sun. It was the first mission in NASA’s New Frontiers program, a medium-class, competitively selected, and principal ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › New_HorizonsNew Horizons - Wikipedia

    New Horizons is an interplanetary space probe launched as a part of NASA 's New Frontiers program. [5] Engineered by the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) and the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI), with a team led by Alan Stern, [6] the spacecraft was launched in 2006 with the primary mission to perform a flyby study ...

  3. New Horizons is the first mission to use onboard regenerative ranging to track the distance between the spacecraft and Earth. When a spacecraft is far from home, the ranging tone sent from the ground to measure distance is weak (or "noisy") by the time it reaches the spacecraft's communications system.

    • Pluto has a “heart,” and it drives activity on the planet. Sometimes you just have to follow your heart, and Pluto seems to have taken that advice quite literally.
    • There’s probably a vast, liquid, water ocean sloshing beneath Pluto’s surface. Gathered ices may not be the only thing that helped reorient Sputnik Planitia.
    • Pluto may still be tectonically active because that liquid ocean is still liquid. Enormous faults stretch for hundreds of miles and cut roughly 2.5 miles into the icy crust covering Pluto’s surface.
    • Pluto was—and still may be—volcanically active. But maybe not “volcanic” in the way you might think. On Earth, molten lava spits, drools, bubbles, and erupts from underwater fissures through volcanoes sitting miles high in and protruding from the oceans, like on Hawaii.
  4. Jul 14, 2015 · New Horizons’ almost 10-year, three-billion-mile journey to closest approach at Pluto took about one minute less than predicted when the craft was launched in January 2006. The spacecraft threaded the needle through a 36-by-57 mile (60 by 90 kilometers) window in space — the equivalent of a commercial airliner arriving no more off target ...

  5. pluto.jhuapl.edu › Mission › Where-is-New-HorizonsNew Horizons

    The New Horizons spacecraft launched on January 19, 2006 – beginning its odyssey to Pluto and the Kuiper Belt. New Horizons now continues on its unparalleled journey of exploration with the close flyby of a Kuiper Belt object called 2014 MU69 – officially named Arrokoth – on January 1, 2019.

  6. People also ask

  7. NASA's New Horizons mission is designed to help us understand worlds at the edge of our solar system by making the first reconnaissance of Pluto and Charon - a "double planet" and the last planet ...

  1. People also search for