Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Probe passes object 4 billion miles away

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Marcia Dunn of The Associated Press; and by Kenneth Chang of The New York Times.

LAUREL, Md. — NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft pulled off the most distant exploratio­n yet of another world Tuesday, skimming past a tiny, icy object 4 billion miles from Earth that looks to be shaped like a bowling pin.

Flight controller­s in Maryland declared success 10 hours after the highrisk, middle-of-the-night encounter at the mysterious body known as Ultima Thule on the frozen fringes of our solar system, 1 billion miles beyond Pluto.

“I don’t know about all of you, but I’m really liking this 2019 thing so far,” lead scientist Alan Stern of Southwest Research Institute said to applause. “I’m here to tell you that last night, overnight, the United States spacecraft New Horizons conducted the farthest exploratio­n in the history of humankind, and did so spectacula­rly.”

The close approach came a half-hour into the new year, and 3½ years after New Horizons’ unpreceden­ted swing past Pluto.

For Ultima Thule —

which wasn’t even known when New Horizons left Earth in 2006 — the endeavor was more difficult. The spacecraft zoomed within 2,200 miles of it, more than three times closer than its Pluto flyby.

Exploring Ultima Thule, which means “beyond the borders of the known world,” could lead to discoverie­s about the origins of the sun and the planets, scientists say.

Operating on autopilot, New Horizons was out of radio contact with controller­s at Johns Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Laboratory from late Monday afternoon until late Tuesday morning. Scientists wanted the spacecraft staring down Ultima Thule and collecting data, not turning toward Earth to phone home.

Only hours later did New Horizons turn its antenna toward home. Then, it sent a 15-minute update on its status, confirming it had survived the flyby. The message took six hours to travel the 4.1 billion miles at the speed of light to Earth. Future transmissi­ons are expected to convey new pictures and readings from the flyby.

Mission operations manager Alice Bowman said she was more nervous this time than she was with Pluto in 2015 because of the challenges and distance. When a solid radio link finally was acquired and team members reported that their spacecraft systems were green, or good, she declared with relief: “We have a healthy spacecraft.” Later, she added to more applause: “We did it again.”

Cheers broke out in the control center and in a nearby auditorium, where hundreds more — still weary from the double countdowns on New Year’s Eve — gathered to await word. Scientists and other team members embraced and shared high-fives, while the spillover auditorium crowd gave a standing ovation.

Stern, Bowman and other key players soon joined their friends in the auditorium, where the celebratio­n continued and a news conference took place. The speakers took delight in showing off the latest picture of Ultima Thule, taken just several hundred-thousand miles before the 12:33 a.m. close approach.

“Even though it’s a pixelated blob still,” said project scientist Hal Weaver of Johns Hopkins, “it’s a better pixelated blob.

“Ultima Thule is finally revealing its secrets to us.”

Based on the early, rudimentar­y images, Ultima Thule is highly elongated — about 20 miles by 10 miles. It’s also spinning end over end, although scientists don’t yet know how fast.

The images also solved a mystery: why Ultima Thule’s brightness appeared unchanging as the spacecraft approached.

Typically, a spinning, irregularl­y shaped object would rhythmical­ly brighten and dim as it spins.

It turns out that the long-distance camera aboard New Horizons was looking down at one of the poles of Ultima Thule, and thus it was always the same side of the object reflecting sunlight. “It’s almost like a propeller blade,” Weaver said. “That explains everything.”

As for its shape, scientists say there are two possibilit­ies.

Ultima Thule is either one object with two connected lobes, sort of like a spinning bowling pin or peanut still in the shell, or two objects orbiting surprising­ly close to one another. A single body is more likely, they noted. An answer should be forthcomin­g today, once better, closer pictures arrive.

“If I’m wrong, I’ll tell you tomorrow,” Stern said Tuesday. “If it’s two separate objects, this would be an unpreceden­ted situation, in terms of how close they’re orbiting one another. It’d be spectacula­r to see, and I’d love to see it, but I think the higher probabilit­y is that it’s a single body.”

By week’s end, “Ultima Thule is going to be a completely different world, compared to what we’re seeing now,” Weaver noted.

Still, the best color closeups won’t be available until February. Those images should reveal whether Ultima Thule has any rings or moons, or craters on its dark, reddish surface. Altogether, it will take nearly two years for all of New Horizons’ data to reach Earth.

The scientists will continue to pore over incoming data this week, but then take a pause when the sun is in between Earth and the spacecraft, blocking communicat­ions. They will meet up again in mid-January.

The observatio­ns should help scientists ascertain how deep-freeze objects like Ultima Thule formed, along with the rest of the solar system, 4.5 billion years ago.

As a preserved relic from that original time, Ultima Thule also promises to shed light on the so-called Kuiper Belt, or Twilight Zone, in which hundreds of thousands of objects reside well beyond Neptune.

“This mission’s always been about delayed gratificat­ion,” Stern reminded reporters. He noted it took 12 years to sell the project, five years to build it and nine years to reach the first target, Pluto.

Its mission now totaling $800 million, the baby grand piano-sized New Horizons will keep hurtling toward the edge of the solar system, observing Kuiper Belt Objects, or KBOs, from afar, and taking cosmic particle measuremen­ts.

Although NASA’s Voyagers crossed the Kuiper Belt on their way to interstell­ar space, their 1970s-era instrument­s were not nearly as sophistica­ted as those on New Horizons, Weaver noted, and the twin spacecraft did not pass near any objects known at the time.

The New Horizons team is already pushing for another flyby in the 2020s, while the nuclear power and other spacecraft systems are still good.

Bowman takes comfort and pleasure in knowing that long after New Horizons stops working, it “will keep going on and on.”

“There’s a bit of all of us on that spacecraft,” she said, “and it will continue after we’re long gone here on Earth.”

 ?? AP/NASA/BILL INGALLS ?? Principal investigat­or Alan Stern (back, right) of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., celebrates with schoolchil­dren Tuesday at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md., at the exact moment that the New Horizons spacecraft made the closest approach of Kuiper Belt object Ultima Thule.
AP/NASA/BILL INGALLS Principal investigat­or Alan Stern (back, right) of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., celebrates with schoolchil­dren Tuesday at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md., at the exact moment that the New Horizons spacecraft made the closest approach of Kuiper Belt object Ultima Thule.
 ?? AP/NASA/BILL INGALLS ?? Principal investigat­or Alan Stern of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., gives a high-five Tuesday in Laurel, Md., to mission operations manager Alice Bowman of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory after the team received signals from the New Horizons spacecraft that it is healthy and collecting data.
AP/NASA/BILL INGALLS Principal investigat­or Alan Stern of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., gives a high-five Tuesday in Laurel, Md., to mission operations manager Alice Bowman of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory after the team received signals from the New Horizons spacecraft that it is healthy and collecting data.

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