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| From | RS Wood <rsw@therandymon.com> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | sci.misc |
| Subject | Re: New Horizons has phoned home; data forthcoming |
| Date | 2015-07-15 07:27 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <d0mga8Fphq2U2@mid.individual.net> (permalink) |
| References | <mo51d3$rfj$1@solani.org> |
On 2015-07-15, RS Wood <rsw@therandymon.com> wrote: > From the «go dude, go!» department: Title: New Horizons Phones Home > After Pluto Flyby -- Craft Healthy, Data Recorded Author: > help@slashdot.org Date: Wed, 15 Jul 2015 01:08:00 -0400 Link: > http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/Nq_zO_EoH3g/new-horizons-phones-home-after-pluto-flyby----craft-healthy-data-recorded > > Tablizer was one of several readers to note that the New Horizons > probe has completed its flyby of Pluto and radioed home to confirm > that it went without incident. Mission Ops manager Alice Bowman said > the spacecraft was healthy, full of data, and sharing telemetry. The > images New Horizon collected haven't been downloaded yet, but NASA > decided to tide us over by releasing this high-resolution view from > the day before. It was taken when the probe was still 768,000 > kilometers away with a resolution of 3.8km per pixel. (Closest > approach was approximately 12,500km.) They also released an > exaggerated-color image of Pluto and Charon which highlights the > non-uniformity of both worlds. Pictures from closest approach are not > yet available. Expect another post late Wednesday or early Thursday > with those images. The reason for this is that New Horizons can't take > pictures and send them to us at the same time, so imaging activity is > interspersed with downlinks to Earth to transmit data. Emily > Lakdawalla has posted a downlink schedule. On Wednesday afternoon > (ET), the probe will transmit three images of Pluto that were taken > from 77,000km away, with a resolution of 0.4 km per pixel. They'll be > the first three pieces of a mosaic of Pluto's surface, and the dwarf > planet will fill all three frames. It will take a full 16 months for > New Horizons to transmit all the data it collects. (Lakdawalla also > added Pluto to a montage of the biggest non-planets in the solar > system. New Horizon's measurements indicate Pluto is slightly larger > than we thought. It's now considered the largest of the Kuiper Belt > objects. > > [image 2][1][image 4][3][image 6][5] > > Read more of this story[7] at Slashdot. Feed: The Register Title: New Horizons: We've got a pretty picture of Pluto. Now for the SCIENCE Author: Iain Thomson Link: http://go.theregister.com/feed/www.theregister.co.uk/2015/07/14/pluto_n ew_horizons_science/ Date: Tue, 14 Jul 2015 19:30:41 -0400 Why this three-billion-mile journey was worth it Comment With everyone going ape over the stunning crisp pictures from NASA's New Horizons probe of the dwarf freezeworld Pluto[1], there are few voices asking if it was worth sending out a space probe to the far end of the Solar System – but it wasn't always that way.… Links: [1]: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/07/13/the_register_has_a_natter_with_n asas_new_horizons_it_crowd/ (link)
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New Horizons has phoned home; data forthcoming RS Wood <rsw@therandymon.com> - 2015-07-15 07:16 +0000 Re: New Horizons has phoned home; data forthcoming RS Wood <rsw@therandymon.com> - 2015-07-15 07:27 +0000
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