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NASA's New Horizons Views First Distant Kuiper Belt Object Beyond Pluto

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NASA's New Horizons flew by Pluto in July 2015, but continued to coast deeper into the Kuiper belt, away from the Sun.

In November 2015, its longest range camera imaged a Kuiper belt object (KBO) -- (15810) 1994 JR1 -- multiple times, independently, over the course of many hours.

Back here in low-Earth orbit, the Hubble space telescope imaged the exact same KBO simultaneously, creating the longest-baseline parallax observations ever made.

In April of 2016, New Horizons made its closest approach to this object at just 66 million miles, taking a much longer and more complex series of images.

An incredible amount of science was learned, including:

  • it rotates rapidly, with a period of just 5.5 hours,
  • it has no moons,
  • and is small and heavily cratered, with long evening and morning shadows.

The most exciting find was to completely determine this new Kuiper belt object's orbit: a 3-to-2 resonance with Neptune, much like Pluto.

But unlike Pluto, it never dips interior to Neptune's orbit, making this Neptune-centered simulated view of the Solar System possible.

New Horizons seeks to extend its mission beyond this year, closely flying-by another KBO and characterizing dozens more.


Mostly Mute Monday tells the story of a single astronomical phenomenon or object primarily in visuals, with no more than 200 words of text.

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