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OUTER PLANETS
The PI's Perspective: Anticipation on Ultima's Doorstep
by Allan Stern - PI New Horizons
Laurel MD (SPX) Dec 28, 2018

The highest resolution imagery we are attempting-an eye-popping 35 meters (about 115 feet) per pixel-is a stretch goal, requiring us to know exactly where both Ultima and New Horizons are as they pass one another at over 32,000 mph in the darkness of the Kuiper Belt. (And by the way, out there the Sun is only about as bright as a full moon on Earth, so Ultima is only very, very faintly lit).

The New Horizons spacecraft is healthy and on final approach to the first close-up exploration of a Kuiper Belt object in history, and the farthest exploration of any world, ever.

In just a few days, on New Year's Eve and New Year's Day, New Horizons will swoop three times closer to our target-2014 MU69 (nicknamed Ultima Thule)-than we flew past Pluto. The anticipation is palpable now: we are on the verge of an important scientific exploration almost 20 years in the making and, in many ways, unlike any other ever attempted.

I'm writing this just days before the New Horizons flyby of "Ultima," and will be my last until the flyby is completed. The pace of activity here at mission control at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory is intense.

Mission operations, encounter operations, navigation operations, and science team efforts are all proceeding in parallel, along with an increasing pace of public affairs and engagement activities. Given that pace, here are some updates to help you prepare for and be involved in next week's historic flyby:

  • We continue to receive and analyze optical navigation images of Ultima made daily on New Horizons. These images, combined with radio tracking of the spacecraft, help our navigators determine if we need to update files on the spacecraft's main computers to improve our flyby observation pointing and closest approach timing. The final chance to update these files occurs only a day before the flyby itself.

  • The highest resolution imagery we are attempting-an eye-popping 35 meters (about 115 feet) per pixel-is a stretch goal, requiring us to know exactly where both Ultima and New Horizons are as they pass one another at over 32,000 mph in the darkness of the Kuiper Belt. (And by the way, out there the Sun is only about as bright as a full moon on Earth, so Ultima is only very, very faintly lit).

If we succeed at this observation, we'll have far better imaging resolution of Ultima than we got at Pluto (where best resolution was 70-80 meters, or 230-260 feet, per pixel). If we don't, other imaging observations will still exceed most of the Pluto imaging. And while we don't want to fail, you should know that that these stretch-goal observations are risky. But with risk comes reward, and we would rather try than not try to get these, and that is what we will do.

With the federal government shut down - and NASA TV offline - we're providing coverage of our flyby events and press conferences on several channels, including the mission website, the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab's YouTube channel, APL's Twitter feed (@jhuapl) and my own New Horizons Twitter feed (@newhorizons2015). We've posted the schedule of events and channels here; bookmark that page and check back for updates!

As New Horizons closes in on Ultima these final few days before closest approach, our team and people across the world are anticipating the flyby and its scientific results. What will we find when we explore an ancient building block of planets so very well preserved since the dawn of our solar system, 4.5 billion years ago when it was created? No one knows. But soon we will know, beginning in just days!


Related Links
New Horizons at APL
The million outer planets of a star called Sol


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OUTER PLANETS
New Horizons Notebook: On Ultima's Doorstep
Laurel MD (SPX) Dec 24, 2018
New Horizons carried out its last trajectory correction maneuver on approach to Ultima Thule last week, a short thruster burst to direct the spacecraft closer to its precise flyby aim point just 2,200 miles (3,500) above the mysterious Kuiper Belt object at 12:33 am EST on Jan. 1. At 7:53 a.m. EST on Dec. 18, New Horizons fired its small thrusters for just 27 seconds, a 0.26 meter-per-second adjustment that corrected about 180 miles (300 kilometers) of estimated targeting error and sped up the arr ... read more

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