The Sunday Guardian

New Horizons to discover the secrets of the ‘dwarf planet’

- HEATHER COUPER, NIGEL HENBEST

Save Pluto! cried the T-shirts. The slogan “stop planetary discrimina­tion” screamed out on bumper stickers all over the States. “Honk if Pluto is still a planet!”, they urged. Pluto has long been every child’s favourite planet. Discovered in 1930 by the American astronomer Clyde Tombaugh, this tiny world has gripped the imaginatio­n of all and sundry.

But then it became evident that Pluto was not alone. It is a member of a swarm of Kuiper Belt Objects: minuscule worlds at the edge of our Solar System. And in 2005, a team led by Mike Brown — observing from Palomar Mountain — discovered a distant object even more massive (and possibly slightly larger) than Pluto.

The new body was named Eris — a Greek goddess of discord and strife. Her name is appropriat­e, because her discovery challenged the status of Pluto. In August 2006, at a meeting of the Internatio­nal Astronomic­al Union in Prague, Pluto’s ranking on the Solar System was downgraded to that of “dwarf planet” — much to the disappoint­ment of Pluto aficionado­s. Now there are officially only eight planets in the Solar System.

But fans of the mini-world have an event to look forward to. On 14 July, the space probe New Horizons will arrive at the Pluto system after a nine-year journey through space. It will pass within 10,000 km of the now-renamed dwarf planet and 27,000 km from Pluto’s major moon, Charon. New Horizons will study in intimate detail the geology and chemistry of Pluto and its moons — the tiny world has at least five in total.

Alan Stern is the principal investigat­or on the New Horizons mission. And he is passionate about Pluto. He told us that the minuscule world is far more than a mere afterthoug­ht of the Solar System. “Pluto, Eris and their companions are part of a huge unexplored region of our planetary neighbourh­ood,” he explains.

What expectatio­ns does Stern have of the mission? “There’s the possibilit­y of rings circling Pluto; ice-volcanoes like those found by astronomer­s on Neptune’s moon Triton; and maybe unexpected interactio­ns between Pluto and Charon. I don’t make prediction­s,” he adds. “It’s all about exploratio­n.”

After the Pluto fly-by, New Horizons will explore an uncharted zone of our Solar System: the frozen wasteland of the Kuiper Belt Objects — a twilight region where no spacecraft has ever been before. The lure of more exotic and distant worlds is drawing astronomer­s and space planners ever outwards. What’s Up This month, the sky is lit up by two full Moons. It’s not an uncommon occurrence, and doesn’t mean anything — but expect a rash of publicity for the second full Moon on 31 July, which self-proclaimed pundits mistakenly call a blue Moon. Coming back to the very start of July, brilliant Venus is up close and personal with giant planet Jupiter, low in the northwest after sunset: on 1 July they are separated by less than the width of the Moon. But they’re sinking into the twilight glow, and by the end of July both Venus and Jupiter have disappeare­d from sight.

Later in the evening, Saturn is the sole planet you’ll spot, low in the south. The star to its left is Antares, marking the heart of Scorpius, the cosmic scorpion. The fearsome beast’s claws once encompasse­d the region where Saturn lies; but Julius Caesar chopped them off to form the constellat­ion of Libra (the scales).

To the left of Scorpius you’ll find Sagittariu­s. In myth, he was an archer with the body of a horse and a human torso — but the principal stars irresistib­ly remind us of a teapot, complete with a puff of steam (a star cloud) rising from the spout! The centre of our Milky Way galaxy lies in this direction, but we get a poor view of the region from Britain, as Scorpius and Sagittariu­s are always low on the horizon. If you’re travelling south on holiday, though, you’ll have a grandstand view.

Even with the naked eye (away from bright lights), you’ll see star clusters and glowing nebulae dotted along the glowing band of the Milky Way. Pack a pair of binoculars, and you’ll be treated to a stunning panoply of celestial treasures. THE INDEPENDEN­T

 ??  ?? Fans of Pluto can expect some exciting new informatio­n soon.
Fans of Pluto can expect some exciting new informatio­n soon.

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