Flying Past Pluto
From NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the
Day
What would it look like
to fly past Pluto? The robotic New
Horizons spacecraft did just this in late July and continues to return
stunning pictures of the dwarf
planet.
Some well-chosen flyby
images have now been digitally sequenced to create the featured video.
The animation begins
by showing New Horizon's approach to the Pluto system, with Pluto and
its largest moon Charon orbiting
a common center of mass.
As the spacecraft bears
down on Pluto uniquely,
surprising surface features are nearly resolved that,
unfortunately, quickly rotate out of view.
New Horizons then passes
just above and near a large, fascinating,
light-colored, heart-shaped, and unusually smooth region now known as Tombaugh Region.
The spacecraft then
pivots to look back at Pluto's night side, seeing an encompassing atmospheric
haze.
Finally, Pluto fades away in a final
sequence illustrated with the orbits of many of Pluto's smaller moons.
Although humanity has
no current plans to return to Pluto, the New Horizons spacecraft may well be directed
next to fly past an asteroid currently known only as 2014 MU69.
Video Credit: NASA, Johns Hopkins U. APL, SwRI, Stuart Robbins
To watch this video directly on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=23&v=gHwnkEIfNgs
To watch this video directly on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=23&v=gHwnkEIfNgs