China Daily

Long distance call

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NASA’s New Horizons amazes with signals sent back home

United States — NASA’s New Horizons explorer successful­ly “phoned home” on Tuesday after a journey to the most distant world ever explored by humankind, a frozen rock at the edge of the solar system that scientists hope will uncover secrets to its creation. The nuclear-powered space probe has traveled 6.4 billion kilometers to come within 3,540 km of Ultima Thule, an apparently peanutshap­ed, 32-km-long space rock in the uncharted heart of the Kuiper Belt. The belt is a ring of icy celestial bodies just outside Neptune’s orbit.

Engineers at Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Maryland cheered when the spacecraft’s first signals came through the National Aeronautic and Space Agency’s Deep Space Network at 10:28 am local time.

“We have a healthy spacecraft,” Mission Operations Manager Alice Bowman declared.

The spacecraft will ping back more detailed images and data from Thule in the coming days, NASA said.

Launched in January 2006, New

Horizons embarked on its 4 billionmil­e journey toward the solar system’s edge to study the dwarf planet Pluto and its five moons.

“Last night, overnight, the United States spacecraft New Horizons conducted the farthest exploratio­n in the history of humankind, and did so spectacula­rly,” New Horizons principal investigat­or Alan Stern told a news conference at the Johns Hopkins facility in Laurel, Maryland.

An image of Thule, sent overnight and barely more detailed than previous images, deepens the mystery of whether Thule is a single rock shaped like an asymmetric­al peanut or actually two rocks orbiting each other, “blurred together because of their proximity”, Stern said.

During a 2015 flyby, the probe found Pluto to be slightly larger than previously thought. In March, it revealed methane-rich dunes on the icy dwarf planet’s surface.

Now 1.6 billion km beyond Pluto for its second mission into the Kuiper Belt, New Horizons will study the makeup of Ultima Thule’s atmosphere and terrain in a monthslong study to seek clues about the formation of the solar system and its planets.

Scientists had not discovered Ultima Thule when the probe was launched, according to NASA, making the mission unique in that respect. In 2014, astronomer­s found Thule using the Hubble Space Telescope and the following year selected it for New Horizon’s extended mission.

As the probe flies 3,540 km above Thule’s surface, scientists hope it will detect the chemical compositio­n of its atmosphere and terrain in what NASA says will be the closest

observatio­n of a body so remote.

“We are straining the capabiliti­es of this spacecraft, and by tomorrow we’ll know how we did,” Stern told reporters on Monday. “There are no second chances for New Horizons.”

While the mission marks the farthest close encounter of an object within our solar system, NASA’s Voyager 1 and 2, a pair of deepspace probes launched in 1977, have reached greater distances on a mission to survey extrasolar bodies. Both probes are still operationa­l.

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 ?? NASA VIA AFP ?? New Horizons principal investigat­or Alan Stern (center) celebrates with school children at the exact moment that the New Horizons spacecraft made the closest approach of Kuiper Belt object Ultima Thule, on Tuesday, at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland.
NASA VIA AFP New Horizons principal investigat­or Alan Stern (center) celebrates with school children at the exact moment that the New Horizons spacecraft made the closest approach of Kuiper Belt object Ultima Thule, on Tuesday, at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland.

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