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OUTER PLANETS
New Visualization of Space Environment at Pluto
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Dec 09, 2015


Simulating space weather at Pluto - watch a video on the research here.

This video shows a simulation of the space environment all the way out to Pluto in the months surrounding New Horizons' July 2015 flyby.

At the time, scientists at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, worked with the New Horizons team to test how well their models-and other models contributed by scientists around the world-predicted the space environment at Pluto.

Understanding the environment through which our spacecraft travel can ultimately help protect them from radiation and other potentially damaging effects. Visualizers at Goddard recently updated the movie of the model, creating this new release.

Though the vacuum of space is about a thousand times emptier than a laboratory vacuum, it's still not completely empty. The sun releases a constant stream of particles called the solar wind-as well as occasional denser clouds of particles known as coronal mass ejections, or CMEs-both containing embedded magnetic fields.

The density, speed, and temperature of these particles, as well as the direction and strength of the embedded magnetic fields, make up the space environment.

To map the space environment at Pluto, scientists combined the predictions of several models-and looked at events that had long since passed Earth.

"We set the simulation to start in January of 2015, because the particles passing Pluto in July 2015 took some six months to make the journey from the sun," said Dusan Odstrcil, a space weather scientist at Goddard who created the Enlil model.

The Enlil model, named for the Sumerian god of the wind, is one of the primary models used to simulate the space environment near Earth and is the basis for the New Horizons simulation.

The new, combined model tracks CMEs longer than ever before. Because particles must travel for many months before reaching Pluto, the CMEs eventually spread out and merge with other CMEs and the solar wind to form larger clouds of particles and magnetic field.

These combined clouds stretch out as they travel away from the sun, forming thin ring shapes by the time they reach Pluto-quite different from the typical balloon shape of CMEs seen here at Earth.


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The million outer planets of a star called Sol






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Previous Report
OUTER PLANETS
Pluto surface details revealed in best images yet
Laurel MD (SPX) Dec 05, 2015
NASA's New Horizons spacecraft has sent back the first few of a series of the sharpest views of Pluto it obtained during its July flyby - and this image sequence forms the best close-ups of Pluto that humans may see for decades. Every week the piano-sized New Horizons spacecraft transmits data stored on its digital recorders from its flight through the Pluto system on July 14. These ... read more


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