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Thursday 16 April 2015

This Is The First Ever Color Picture of Pluto

ESO-L._Calçada_-_Pluto_(by)

New Horizons spacecraft is now only three months away from its historic sweep through the Pluto-Charon system in mid-July. First image in color!

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NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft acquired its first picture of Pluto and its largest moon, Charon, in color on April 9. It’s the first color image ever made of the Pluto system by a spacecraft on approach. Neither Pluto nor Charon is well resolved here, but their distinctly different appearances can already be seen. Image via NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute.

NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft team released this tantalizing first color image of Pluto and its Texas-sized moon Charon. The team called this image a preliminary reconstruction, which they said will be refined later. The spacecraft acquired the image from a distance of about 71 million miles (115 million kilometers)-roughly the distance from the sun to Venus. New Horizons is now only three months from its historic encounter with Pluto. The flyby through the Pluto system will take place on July 14, at which time the spacecraft will deliver color images that eventually show surface features as small as a few miles across.

New Horizons is the fastest spacecraft ever launched and may be the only spacecraft to sweep past Pluto in our lifetimes. It has traveled a longer time and farther away – more than nine years and three billion miles (4.8 billion km) – than any space mission in history to reach the Pluto system, which consists of the dwarf planet and its five known moons.

NASA pointed out that New Horizons’ flyby of the Pluto system on July 14 will:
… complete the initial reconnaissance of the classical solar system. This mission also opens the door to an entirely new ‘third’ zone of mysterious small planets and planetary building blocks in the Kuiper Belt, a large area with numerous objects beyond Neptune’s orbit.

Principal investigator Alan Stern said the mission would mark the first up-close look at a binary planet. He called Pluto a binary because its large moon Charon is so nearly like Pluto in size.

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Between now and July 14, New Horizons will get closer and closer to Pluto and its moons, and the image quality will rapidly improve. At closest approach, New Horizons will sweep through the Pluto system at a speed of 30,000 mph (50,000 kilometers per hour).

Source : EarthSky.org

8 comments:

  1. I look at this photo of Pluto; the B&W photo of Ceres on NASA's Spitzer Telescope Website; the photo of "The Pillars of Creation" on Hubble's Website, etc. and I can't help but recall the excitement of Sputnik, the moon-landings, and all the subsequent missions.

    We've traveled a very long way in just a little over a six decades and, for me, the excitement still hasn't faded. Had politics and Vietnam not cut into NASA's funding and momentum, there's no telling where we'd be by now.

    Yet; it is still an achievement filled with more tantalizing wonder and pure fascination than I could have possibly imagined when it all began in 1957 as I sat on the grass in the dark Oklahoma night hoping to catch a glimpse of Sputnik racing across the sky.

    Now, we have so much more than a small, shiny little ball with antennae - Hubble Telescope, the Voyager Twins, Curiosity, Cassini, etc.....

    What a blast to have been able to witness it all from the very beginning; to see what dreams couldn't achieve.

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  2. Reblogged this on Alain V Berrebi's Blog and commented:
    Call me old school, still think of it as a planet, in either case this is very exciting.

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  3. Yes,indeed !
    Thanks for visiting blog :)

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  4. I am just awestruck at the thought of being able to see pluto up so close...

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  5. Yeah, but we have to wait for 3-4month to get a closer look

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  6. I am sure the wait will be worth it :-)

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