The Many Views of Pluto
It’s now two weeks from the New Horizons close flyby of Pluto and Charon. The images are flowing, science data are streaming in, and the team has made pictures almost immediately available online for the rest of us to marvel at. I know for a fact that this mission has taken science educators as well as scientists by storm, and the mission itself has made a lot of information available to educators, the media, and the public. In a delightful development, it has also caught the imagination of artists and musicians as well.
A great many very talented astro-imaging experts have taken to doing a little processing on those releases, resulting in some fine views and a lot of speculation on social media about we’re almost seeing on Pluto and Charon.
For example, this view is a stacked and processed image from a June 18th release from the New Horizons team. The astro-imager is C. Menoir-Salvan, and his work has spurred a LOT Of discussion about what those features could be.
The clearest views are yet to come, so these discussions among planetary science-savvy folks has been very interesting to participate in and follow. Keep in mind that during flyby, we’ll see some images, but due to the lengthy travel time for the signals from New Horizons, the data will be streaming in over the next year or so! We’ll get to see good images of Pluto now, and then the real scientific treasure will make its way to the mission teams. New Horizons is really the scientific gift that keeps on giving!
The Artistic View
Artists and musicians are being inspired by the whole Pluto thing as well, with some lovely additions to the STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math) realm. Here are a couple of the many examples I’ve seen float across my view the past few days. The British space artist David Hardy offered his view of what Pluto and Charon look like. He’s very tuned into the science behind what planetary surfaces can look like, and he graciously allowed me to share his view of the double planet here.
Dan Durda is a space artist and planetary scientist at Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, who has been inspired by New Horizons and the mission to Pluto in more ways than one! Here’s one of his depictions of Pluto and Charon, with the distant Sun shedding a bit of light on the scene. Both Dan and David are members of a wonderful organization called the International Association of Astronomical Artists at IAAA.org, and I count a number of the members as friends and colleagues.
In the music department, there are folks out there creating Pluto tunes and pieces inspired by the distant system. My own favorite composer, Geodesium (the stage name of Mark C. Petersen), created a piece called “Charon” for a project a while back. You can hear a snippet here. It’s on the album Stellar Collections.
It’s a space music composition meant to evoke Pluto’s cold, forbidding-looking, yet intriguing companion world and I like to think of it as Charon’s siren song.
Mark also created a vision of Pluto and Charon for a Gemini Observatory press release a few years ago, when astronomers found evidence of possible geyser-like or ice volcano action on Charon. He used a program called Seeker (from Software Bisque), added in a DigitalSky starfield, and some plumes that were indicated in the observations. I can’t wait to see if this vision, as well as Michael’s and Dan’s, have played out for real. Certainly the preliminary science results indicate something interesting happening at these worlds!
New Horizons PI Alan Stern sent me a link to an amazingly cool song written by singer-songwriter Craig Werth and performed by NYC-based folksinger Christine Lavin, who also went out and filmed a lot of people for the segment. It really shows their love of Pluto. The song is called “Oh Pluto!”, and it’s a great tribute to Pluto and its popularity. You’ll see and hear a number of folk legends, an actor from “The Sopranos”, a band member from Dropkick Murphys, as well as men, women, boys and girls from all walks of life, sending their greetings to Pluto.
There are many more folks paying tribute to Pluto in their own ways — they’re engaged, entranced, and excited by the exploration and the discoveries to come. Whoever you are, wherever you are, use your own talents to salute Pluto, and also to the people on the New Horizons mission. They’re dedicated scientists, students, technicians, administrators — all working really hard to bring this distant world into focus for the rest of us! (P.S. If you know of other space artists and musicians who have created works about Pluto, let me know in the comments and I’ll do a second entry, soon!)
Another great, upbeat song written around the time of New Horizons’ launch or shortly thereafter, is Elias Fey’s “New Horizons,” a tribute to Clyde Tombaugh and the New Horizons mission, which can be found here:
http://www.eliasfey.com/newhorizons.html
Thanks! I’ve just gotten a couple more links to some space art, etc. so looks like I’ll be doing another entry!
Thank you for the citation!. I didn’t know that my processing work of the LORRI images spurred a lot of discussion, but it is nice to know. I’m just excited by the gifts of New Horizons and can’t wait for the hi-res images (as everyone interested in Planetary Sciences). I looked forward to see the real face of Pluto since I was a child and now is possible!. It is fun to show how Pluto reveals intriguing features during the New Horizons approach and will be interesting to compare the future images from the Pluto flybys with the processed long distance images.
My pleasure, Cesar! I am very excited about seeing the flyby images; I will be at the mission control along with other guests of the mission to see them first-hand. Probably at the same time everybody else does, but it will be exciting to “be there”. 😉
I can’t wait to see the close ups of the world I imagined when I was young. The book “The search for planet X” had just been published and I read it a dreamed of traveling to see it.
I would have never dreamed we would be earthbound and depending on the Russians to get us into space.