Category Archives: Pluto

New Horizons Extends Planetary Exploration

Musings on Exploration

Pluto north pole region exploration
The north polar region of Pluto, with canyons running vertically across the region, named Lowell Regio. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute

We got another green light from the New Horizons mission this week, indicating its journey of exploration of continues. It means the spacecraft is alive and well, although mostly hibernating on its way out to its next target. The spacecraft is speeding along, continuing its headlong outward journey from Earth, exploring “new worlds” out there. If what it saw at Pluto is any indication, planetary scientists will likely have a few surprises in store.

Already, they’re puzzling over the shape of the next target world, 2014 MU69 (first spied by Hubble Space Telescope). Could it be two worlds in close orbit? A bi-lobed world in the deeps of the Kuiper Belt? We’ll all find out much later this year.

Targeting a Distant Planet

Pluto atmosphere exploration
Sunlight filters through and illuminates Pluto’s complex atmospheric haze layers.  Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute

Pluto has always been a target for exploration, although the launch windows don’t open very often. Heck, it wasn’t even discovered until early in the 20th century. Missions to the nearby planets didn’t begin until the 1960s, and the outer planets in the late 1970s.

Pluto started getting taken seriously as the most distant known planet in the late 1980s. Eventually, the New Horizons project was selected after a few tentative starts and a competition. In September 1989, a group of us students put together a Pluto Perihelion party to celebrate the planet’s closest approach to the Sun.

Over beers and volleyball, we got into a fairly heated discussion about when Pluto’s tenuous atmosphere would freeze out and fall to the surface. And, that was a concern for any mission that would head out that way. Would it get there in time to measure the atmosphere before it “fell down”? To be sure, that “freezing out” wouldn’t take place for many years, and we speculated when that might happen. It was a subject of much debate. We all had to wait until a spacecraft could actually get out there. But, no doubt about it, Pluto was definitely an object of fascination years before we got there with a spacecraft.

The Attempt to Demote a Distant Planet

Pluto also became an object of controversy. In the years since its perihelion, only a few months after New Horizons was launched, nobody expected the IAU to decide Pluto wasn’t a planet. That happened even before it had been explored. Most planetary scientists weren’t sure what to expect from a world so far out that it takes a decade to get there, even for a spacecraft that is the fastest ever sent. So, why pre-judge the world before it’s explored? I still wonder that to this day. Nothing about that “decision” made sense, except perhaps for the proffering of the term “dwarf planet” to cement Pluto’s planetary status.

Moving on to the Next Distant World

MU69 exploration and artist's concept
The Kuiper Belt object 2014 MU69 may be a double-lobed object or possibly a more spherical one with a chunk missing. The New Horizons spacecraft will fly by this object on December 31, 2018. Courtesy JHU/APL/SWRI/Alex Parker

Fast-forward to now, when we get those weekly “green lights” from New Horizons. It’s kind of heartening to know that a tiny outpost of human intellect is speeding out through the solar system, extending our senses to such a cold, dark, and distant region.

New Horizons has done a great deal at Pluto. However, it’s really just getting started in the Kuiper Belt. We’re ready for the next stop on the tour, even as we look back to see that the pesky Plutonian atmosphere still hasn’t fallen down. Even more fascinating, Pluto’s fascinating surface belies activity deep inside the planet.

What will 2014 MU69 tell us? I can’t wait to find out!

Want the Car Alan Stern Drove While Heading to Pluto?

Help Lowell Observatory: Bid on Alan Stern’s “Second Fastest Vehicle”

Alan Stern car
Alan Stern’s car next to a Percival Lowell’s 1912 car, named “Big Red”. Alan named his “New Red” in tribute. 

Okay, so my friend Alan Stern has been hinting around all week about something “cool” about to happen. If you’ve heard of him, you know he and his team of scientists and technicians pulled off something REALLY cool a year and a half ago. That’s when their New Horizons spacecraft swept past Pluto. It gave us the best (and so far only) close-up images of that distant planet.

All the while Alan and his team were waiting for New Horizons to get to Pluto, he was driving a red Nissan 350Z. It was the only car he drove. In fact, he bought it in 2006, the year New Horizons lifted off and started on its journey to Pluto and beyond. The car is still in great shape (just like New Horizons), and so Alan is donating it Lowell Observatory, where it will be auctioned off to the highest bidder.  It’s Alan’s way of paying tribute to Clyde Tombaugh and Lowell Observatory, the man who searched for Pluto and the place where it was discovered. “New Horizons was, and is, the best aspect of my career so far,” Alan said. “So I wanted to donate this car to Lowell Observatory as a fundraising vehicle to recognize the fact that New Horizons could not have happened without the historic and pioneering work that took place at Lowell Observatory early in the last century.”

Funding Outreach

The proceeds from the auction of Alan’s “other spacecraft” will help fund Lowell’s outreach and scientific research programs. It’s also a unique way to get a very special object. The car sports a bumper sticker that says, “My other vehicle is on its way to Pluto”. If you’re the lucky bidder on this well-cared-for car now at Lowell, you also get to enjoy a dinner with Alan Stern, who is a great guy and one of Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world. I’ve done that (without having to buy a car) and it’s a great treat! So, go ahead and give it a whirl. You’ll have fun and be supporting a worthy cause.

Interested in owning Alan’s car (which is in great shape and should run for another 230,000 files?  Check out the auction link here: Own Alan’s Car. You just might get lucky and get Alan’s “second-fastest” vehicle in YOUR driveway! Plus, it’s all for a good cause at Lowell Observatory.

The auction begins December 15 and ends 11:59 p.m. (PST) on December 24. What a heck of a holiday present and I’m sure that Lowell Observatory will love you for it, too!