Toronto Star

Ringing in the new year with close-ups of a distant world

Pluto spacecraft team is setting its sights on faraway, primitive relic

- MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA.— The spacecraft team that brought us close-ups of Pluto will ring in the new year by exploring an even more distant and mysterious world.

NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft will zip past the scrawny, icy object nicknamed Ultima Thule (TOO-lee) soon after the stroke of midnight.

About 1.6 billion kilometres beyond Pluto and an astounding 6.4 billion km from Earth, Ultima Thule will be the farthest world ever explored by humankind.

That’s what makes this deepfreeze target so enticing; it’s a preserved relic dating all the way back to our solar system’s origin 4.5 billion years ago. No spacecraft has visited anything so primitive.

“What could be more exciting than that?” said project scientist Hal Weaver of Johns Hopkins University, part of the New Horizons team.

Lead scientist Alan Stern of Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., expects the New Year’s encounter to be riskier and more difficult than the rendezvous with Pluto: The spacecraft is older, the target is smaller, the flyby is closer and the distance from us is greater. New Horizons NASA launched the spacecraft in 2006; it’s about the size of a baby grand piano. It flew past Pluto in 2015, providing the first close-up views of the dwarf planet. With the wildly successful flyby behind them, mission planners won an extension from NASA and set their sights on a destinatio­n deep inside the Kuiper Belt. As distant as it is, Pluto is barely in the Kuiper Belt, the so-called Twilight Zone stretching beyond Neptune. Ultima Thule is in the Twilight Zone’s heart. Ultima Thule This Kuiper Belt object was discovered by the Hubble Space Telescope in 2014. Officially known as 2014 MU69, it got the nickname Ultima Thule in an online vote. In classic and medieval literature, Thule was the most distant, northernmo­st place beyond the known world. When New Horizons first glimpsed the rocky ice ball in August it was just a dot. Good close-up pictures should be available the day after the flyby. Are we there yet? New Horizons will make its closest approach in the wee hours of Jan. 1 — 12:33 a.m. EST. The spacecraft will zoom within 3,500 kilometres of Ultima Thule.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An image from NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft shows Pluto illuminate­d from behind by the sun.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An image from NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft shows Pluto illuminate­d from behind by the sun.

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