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Event Horizon: Nasa spacecraft makes history, flies past Ultima Thule 6.4 billion km from Earth

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  • Nasa spacecraft New Horizons in historic fly-by of the farthest, and quite possibly the oldest, cosmic body ever explored by humankind
  • Ultima Thule is a cool mass roughly 32km long and shaped like a giant peanut
The nerdiest New Year’s party in the solar system happened Tuesday 6.4 billion km from Earth, where Nasa spacecraft flew past a distant world called Ultima Thule, the furthest object humans have ever explored.

Nasa rang in the New Year with a live online broadcast to mark the spacecraft’s zoom past the mysterious object located in a dark and frigid region of space known as the Kuiper Belt.

“Go New Horizons!” said lead scientist Alan Stern as a crowd cheered at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Maryland to mark the moment at 12:33 am (1.33pm Hong Kong time) when the New Horizons spacecraft aimed its cameras at the space rock four.

“Never before has a spacecraft explored something so far away.”

The spaceship was to collect 900 images over the course of a few seconds as it shaved by at a distance of about 3,500km at a speed of 51,500km/h (32,000mph).

Real-time video of the actual fly-by was impossible, since it takes more than six hours for a signal sent from Earth to reach the spaceship, named New Horizons, and another six hours for the response to arrive.

A solo track recorded by legendary Queen guitarist Brian May - who also holds an advanced degree in astrophysics - was being released to accompany a video simulation as Nasa commentators described the close pass.

Stern said that Ultima Thule was unique because it was a relic from the early days of the solar system and could provide answers about the origins of other planets.

“The object is in such a deep freeze that it is perfectly preserved from its original formation,” he said.

“Everything we are going to learn about Ultima - from its composition to its geology to how it was originally assembled, whether it has satellites and an atmosphere and those kinds of things – are going to teach us about the original formation conditions of objects in the solar system.”

But the encounter itself was risky, and if the spacecraft were to collide with a speck of space debris as small as a grain of rice, it could be destroyed instantly, mission managers warned.

For that reason, Stern said he and his colleagues were “on pins and needles to see how this turns out”.

The first signal back to Earth should come about 10 hours after the fly-by, around 9:45am (10:45pm Hong Kong time). Only then will Nasa know if New Horizons survived the close pass.

Scientists are not sure what Ultima Thule (pronounced TOO-lee) looks like - whether it is cratered or smooth, or even if it is a single object or a cluster.

It was discovered in 2014 with the help of the Hubble Space Telescope, and is believed to be up to 32km in size.

A blurred and pixelated image released Monday, taken from 1.9 million km away, has intrigued scientists because it appears to show an elongated blob, not a round space rock.

Even clearer images should be in hand over the next few days.

Scientists decided to study it with New Horizons after the spaceship, which launched in 2006, completed its main mission of flying by Pluto in 2015, returning the most detailed images ever taken of the dwarf planet.

Seven instruments on board will record high-resolution images and gather data about its size and composition.

Every 20 minutes, the spacecraft’s cameras and infrared imagers are capturing shots of the space rock, “so as it rotates and we get closer we will get good data on all parts of it as we approach,” said John Spencer, a scientist with the Southwest Research Institute.

Stern said the goal was to take images of Ultima that are three times the resolution the team had for Pluto.

Ultima Thule was named for a mythical, far-northern island in medieval literature and cartography, according to Nasa.

Project scientist Hal Weaver of the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory said humans didn’t even know the Kuiper Belt - a vast ring of relics from the formation days of the solar system - existed until the 1990s.

“This is the frontier of planetary science,” said Weaver.

“We finally have reached the outskirts of the solar system, these things that have been there since the beginning and have hardly changed -we think. We will find out.”

In an editorial in The New York Times, Stern recalled that December 2018 marks the 50th anniversary of the first time humans ever explored another world, when US astronauts orbited the Moon aboard Apollo 8.

“New Horizons will continue in that legacy,” Stern wrote.

“As you celebrate New Year’s Day, cast an eye upward and think for a moment about the amazing things our country and our species can do when we set our minds to it.”

While the mission marked the farthest close-encounter of an object within our solar system, Nasa’s Voyager 1 and 2, a pair of deep space probes launched in 1977, have reached greater distances on a mission to survey extrasolar bodies.

Both probes are still operational.

The Washington Post, Agence France-Presse, Reuters

https://www.scmp.com/news/world/uni...ent-horizon-nasa-spacecraft-approaches-ultima
 
Show video else didnt happen, Long live Flat Earth nuts
I too believe in video proofs and I do not believe in Flat Earth! My earnest desire is to watch live videos of Jupiter!

Real-time video of the actual fly-by was impossible, since it takes more than six hours for a signal sent from Earth to reach the spaceship, named New Horizons, and another six hours for the response to arrive.
 
April 1st is still 4 months away or it is a different calendar at NASA?
 
I too believe in video proofs and I do not believe in Flat Earth! My earnest desire is to watch live videos of Jupiter!

Real-time video of the actual fly-by was impossible, since it takes more than six hours for a signal sent from Earth to reach the spaceship, named New Horizons, and another six hours for the response to arrive.
I think it has a 15 w transmitter. No chance of video. Only pics.
All this slow speed space travel is really bugging. Takes 8 months to Mars.
Max speed of a spacecraft ever recorded is 74000 m/s. Speed of light is 300000000 m/s.
So with present theory , we can increase speed by 4000 times to light speed.
Warp speed is 8000 times of light speed. When can we reach that. Not in our life times.
 
I too believe in video proofs and I do not believe in Flat Earth! My earnest desire is to watch live videos of Jupiter!

Real-time video of the actual fly-by was impossible, since it takes more than six hours for a signal sent from Earth to reach the spaceship, named New Horizons, and another six hours for the response to arrive.
Why there is no mention of the name of the "spaceship" ... a kid wrote this article?
 



This image taken by the Long-Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) is the most detailed of Ultima Thule returned so far by the New Horizons spacecraft. It was taken at 5:01 Universal Time on January 1, 2019, just 30 minutes before closest approach from a range of 18,000 miles (28,000 kilometers), with an original scale of 459 feet (140 meters) per pixel. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute


January 2, 2019
NASA's New Horizons Mission Reveals Entirely New Kind of World
Images of the Kuiper Belt object Ultima Thule unveil the very first stages of solar system's history

Scientists from NASA's New Horizons mission released the first detailed images of the most distant object ever explored — the Kuiper Belt object nicknamed Ultima Thule. Its remarkable appearance, unlike anything we've seen before, illuminates the processes that built the planets four and a half billion years ago.

"This flyby is a historic achievement," said New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado. "Never before has any spacecraft team tracked down such a small body at such high speed so far away in the abyss of space. New Horizons has set a new bar for state-of-the-art spacecraft navigation."

The new images — taken from as close as 17,000 miles (27,000 kilometers) on approach — revealed Ultima Thule as a "contact binary," consisting of two connected spheres. End to end, the world measures 19 miles (31 kilometers) in length. The team has dubbed the larger sphere "Ultima" (12 miles/19 kilometers across) and the smaller sphere "Thule" (9 miles/14 kilometers across).

The team says that the two spheres likely joined as early as 99 percent of the way back to the formation of the solar system, colliding no faster than two cars in a fender-bender.

"New Horizons is like a time machine, taking us back to the birth of the solar system. We are seeing a physical representation of the beginning of planetary formation, frozen in time," said Jeff Moore, New Horizons Geology and Geophysics team lead. "Studying Ultima Thule is helping us understand how planets form — both those in our own solar system and those orbiting other stars in our galaxy."

Data from the New Year's Day flyby will continue to arrive over the next weeks and months, with much higher resolution images yet to come.

"In the coming months, New Horizons will transmit dozens of data sets to Earth, and we'll write new chapters in the story of Ultima Thule — and the solar system," said Helene Winters, New Horizons Project Manager.

The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, designed, built and operates the New Horizons spacecraft, and manages the mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate. The Southwest Research Institute, based in San Antonio, leads the science team, payload operations and encounter science planning. New Horizons is part of the New Frontiers Program managed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

Follow the New Horizons mission on Twitter and use the hashtags #UltimaThule, #UltimaFlyby and #askNewHorizons to join the conversation. Live updates and links to mission information are also available on http://pluto.jhuapl.edu and www.nasa.gov



The first color image of Ultima Thule, taken at a distance of 85,000 miles (137,000 kilometers) at 4:08 Universal Time on January 1, 2019, highlights its reddish surface. At left is an enhanced color image taken by the Multispectral Visible Imaging Camera (MVIC), produced by combining the near infrared, red and blue channels. The center image taken by the Long-Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) has a higher spatial resolution than MVIC by approximately a factor of five. At right, the color has been overlaid onto the LORRI image to show the color uniformity of the Ultima and Thule lobes. Note the reduced red coloring at the neck of the object. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute
 

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