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New Horizons: Pre-launch, launch and main cruise, Pluto and the Kuiper belt
Alan Stern
post Jan 3 2009, 09:21 AM
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QUOTE (Oersted @ Jan 3 2009, 01:13 AM) *
Dear Alan Stern,

I am mostly a lurker in this forum, but I just want to say that I am so excited by the fact that we´ll hopefully get good imagery of Pluto from NH in the not too far-off future. Truly a dream come true for me and for untold others I'm sure, a "silent majority" of space exploration enthusiasts from all over the world.A few questions: What kind of resolution can we expect from the LORRI imager? And will the geometry of the encounter make a Pluto-Charon moon-rise-like image possible?

Happy New Year 2009 to the New Horizons team!



Oested== LORRI will be able to make its best images at near 130 m resolution. A Charon-rise image is theoretically possible, but hard to accomplish, we aren't taking it--higher priority science beat out this beauty shot. However, some other gorgeous beauty shots are planned.

And for Hyngry4info-- SDC will end when the mission does, just after our last KBO encounter when we're out of fuel to point the antenna.

=Alan
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Thu
post Jan 3 2009, 09:35 AM
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QUOTE (Oersted @ Jan 3 2009, 08:13 AM) *
...the fact that we´ll hopefully get good imagery of Pluto from NH in the not too far-off future...


I recall that the resolution of LORRI images will not exceed that of Hubble until 70 days before Pluto arrival in 2015 so please correct me if I'm wrong.

Edited: Oersted, if you meant 2015 the "not too far-off future" I'm totally agree with you, for a mission like NH, a decade is not a long time laugh.gif
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peter59
post Jan 3 2009, 02:50 PM
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Probably I have not seen before this artistic vision of Pluto. I like it.
Planetary storm over status of Pluto
Pretty picture. Please, not a word about the status of Pluto.


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Alan Stern
post Jan 5 2009, 03:36 PM
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The PI's Perspective

Welcome to Mid-Cruise!

January 5, 2009

As the new year takes root, the New Horizons team is about to celebrate the third anniversary of our launch on January 19, 2006.

If you’ve been following our progress on Twitter or just reading posts on our Web site, then you know our spacecraft has covered well over one-third of the distance to Pluto in those three years, putting it now almost half a billion kilometers beyond Saturn. You might also know that since I last wrote here, we’ve completed our 2008 spacecraft and payload checkout, recalibrated our seven scientific instruments, and refined our trajectory knowledge accuracy. We’ve even had a chance to collect cruise science data on the deep-space plasma and dust environment, as well as some scientifically unique imagery to yield photometric phase curves of Uranus, Neptune and Pluto.

Since December 16, when we concluded our 3.5-month active period for 2008, our baby has been hibernating again. New Horizons will remain in this low-activity hibernation state until mid-summer, when we’ll roust her for another annual checkout.
DSN antenna
NASA’s 70-meter-wide Deep Space Network (DSN) antenna, “the big ear,” in Canberra, Australia. This antenna maintains one of the three main DSN radio links to New Horizons during cruise. It will also be the primary transmit and receive antenna at our closest approach to Pluto on July 14, 2015. New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern visited the Canberra DSN station in mid-November 2008 for technical meetings, and gave several public talks and media interviews about New Horizons in Canberra and Sydney. (NASA Photo)
But enough progress reporting. In this blog entry, I want to take a broader look at the big events along the remaining years of cruise flight to Pluto, and give you a bird’s-eye view of what lies ahead until the main event kicks off, six years from this month.

Three Years and Counting

As I noted above, we’re completing our third year of flight this month. A top-level way to look at our main mission is that our spacecraft is racing 24/7 for nine years begin our exploration of the Pluto system in January 2015, culminate that exploration with the Pluto flyby in July 2015, and follow that with nine months of transmitting data back to Earth. (Of course, we all hope the mission will be extended to fly on to explore primordial Kuiper Belt objects, but that’s a story I’ll detail some other day.)

But, let’s look into our flight to Pluto at the next level of detail. The nine-year flight can be broken down into three, three-year phases: early cruise (2006-2008), mid-cruise (2009-2011), and late cruise (2012-2014).

Early cruise is now behind us, and it was a busy time — no doubt about it. It included a full spacecraft checkout after launch and an intensive period of payload commissioning and calibration, and certification of vehicle and payload readiness for Pluto. It also included three trajectory correction maneuvers, a fleeting asteroid encounter, a six-month Jupiter system flyby, eight major flight software loads and a smattering of cruise Science activities. Moreover, our ground team also planned, executed and analyzed data from our Jupiter encounter, built a backup spacecraft avionics simulator called NHOPS II, designed detailed plans for our Pluto encounter, and began writing the actual command sequences that will drive New Horizons through its most intensive (“core”) exploration period — the seven days before and two days after closest approach to Pluto.

With the dawning of 2009, mid-cruise is now beginning. Although the next three years will be quieter than the past three, they are just as crucial to the success of New Horizons.

During mid-cruise, New Horizons will race from its current position just beyond 12 astronomical units from the Sun to almost 22 AU — ending up more than a quarter-billion kilometers beyond Uranus’ orbit and well toward Neptune’s. In terms of mid-cruise flight activities, we will conduct annual spacecraft and instrument checkouts, as well as a little more cruise science. But in addition, we plan to conduct some encounter test activities in 2010 and 2011. Based on our tracking data, we are also expecting another (small) course correction – less than one meter per second – in 2010.

Meanwhile, on the ground, in addition to planning and executing the spacecraft operations of mid-cruise, we will finish sequencing the nine-day “core” encounter command load, fully test it on the New Horizons spacecraft simulators at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), and plan the surrounding nine weeks of approach and departure activities closest to Pluto.

Late in mid-cruise we’ll also initiate our KBO target search, and we also plan to replace the original (2004-era) computers in our Mission Operations Center (MOC) and Science Operations Center (SOC), so that at encounter these systems are still young enough to be fully reliable. With a mission staff of less than ten people — just half the size it was in early cruise, and more than 10 times smaller than what Voyager needed to fly across the same territory on its way to Uranus and Neptune — one thing is for sure: the Earthly crew of New Horizons is going to be very busy in during mid-cruise.

August Tour of Mission Operations Center
During an August 2008 tour of the New Horizons Mission Operations Center at APL, Mission Operations Manager Alice Bowman provides a progress update to (clockwise, from near flag) Annette Tombaugh Sitze, daughter of Pluto discoverer Clyde Tombaugh; Wilbur Sitze, Clyde Tombaugh’s son-in-law; Siobhan Murphy-Elias, former city councilwoman in Clyde Tombaugh’s original hometown of Streator, Ill.; Carole Stern; Kyle Tombaugh, great grandson of Pluto’s discoverer; and Streator resident Kevin Elias. (JHUAPL photo)

During late cruise, which begins in January 2012, we’ll still (of course) conduct annual spacecraft and instrument checkouts, collect cruise science and perform trajectory corrections (if our navigation and mission design team deems them necessary). But we’ll also complete the KBO target search, complete the planning for the distant approach phase to Pluto, and carry out a comprehensive series of “contingency events” on the mission simulator to prove our spacecraft is capable of detecting and recovering from the most likely kinds of faults that could occur during the encounter in 2015.

But the planned centerpiece activities of late cruise will come in 2012 with a full-up in-flight encounter dress rehearsal (on the spacecraft) of the core nine-day encounter sequence, and a complete pre-encounter calibration of our instrument payload in 2014. We’ve also planned for a backup, second dress rehearsal onboard New Horizons in 2014, but we’d prefer to skip that and save the fuel and project costs if the 2013 dress rehearsal goes well. Also in 2013-2014, our APL mission team will staff up to prepare for 24/7 encounter activities in 2015 with — hold your breath — a whopping 20 people, including the project manager, navigation team, flight planners, flight controllers, education and public outreach, and a part-time secretary. By contrast, Voyager 2’s “skeleton” extended mission operations team for its 1989 Neptune encounter involved almost 150 people; robotic spaceflight sure has become much more efficient over the past 20 years.

Looking Ahead

With that overview in mind, you have a good idea of what’s ahead on the journey to Pluto – and you can see we’re not just twiddling our thumbs and waiting for the big events of 2015. In fact, I hope this "big picture" roadmap of our cruise flight and ground activities allows you to see the mission as we see it: a long, carefully orchestrated preparation for the one-shot chance to explore the archetype of dwarf planets, Pluto, and its system of moons. The United States and NASA will ultimately invest more than $700 million in this expedition, and we’re working hard to make sure we get the scientific goods at the far frontier of our solar system.

Artist Depiction of New Horizons arrival at Pluto
Arrival at Pluto: High noon (GMT) on Tuesday, July 14, 2015! (Artwork by Dan Durda and Ken Moscati)

But over the next six years, as we guide our bird to its target, plan every detail of her approach and close-up explorations, and test for her ability to react to unforeseen circumstances, we will also be doing one more thing: Continuing to be aware that “Murphy” – the infernal daemon of spaceflight – always lurks, challenging us to be ever vigilant across 3-billion-plus miles of abyssal vacuum and over 3,000 days of flight.

The scientific community and the taxpayers of the United States have entrusted us with a very special opportunity to explore a planet that is a billion miles farther away from Earth than any ever visited, and in doing so, to shed light on an impossibly ancient and yet entirely new frontier. So we aren’t taking our opportunity for granted, even during the “quiet” of mid-cruise.

Well, that’s the PI’s update for this time. I’ll be back with more news soon. In the meantime, keep on exploring, just as we do!

- Alan Stern
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nprev
post Jan 6 2009, 01:13 AM
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Terrific update, Alan, thank you very much!!! I am extremely impressed with the small staff size in comparison to that of the Voyagers. Is this largely a function of NH's autonomy alone, or is the ground-based telemetry analysis more automated, or both?


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A few will take this knowledge and use this power of a dream realized as a force for change, an impetus for further discovery to make less ancient dreams real.
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Guest_Oersted_*
post Jan 6 2009, 01:22 AM
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Ah, a meeting with Tombaughs descendants...

...I hope NH will reveal a big nice feature on Pluto that can be named after its discoverer!

And let´s see what Venetia Phair will say about the encounter, which I´m sure she will experience!
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Alan Stern
post Jan 24 2009, 04:53 PM
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Three years down, as of this week!

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ElkGroveDan
post Jan 24 2009, 08:09 PM
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That's really amazing Alan. Three years now. Seems like yesterday. Thanks again for keeping us all in the loop.


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nprev
post Jan 24 2009, 09:38 PM
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My thanks and congratuations as well, Alan. I also volunteer to bring NH her piece of cake... smile.gif


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A few will take this knowledge and use this power of a dream realized as a force for change, an impetus for further discovery to make less ancient dreams real.
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dilo
post Jan 25 2009, 10:21 AM
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Happy birthday, NH! smile.gif


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peter59
post Jan 25 2009, 12:41 PM
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I found an interesting film.
New Horizons: To Pluto and Beyond: The Hibernation Express
We can see how the New Horizons team worked during the hibernation process. It is also something about UMSF (between 1:26 - 1:29)


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Dominik
post Jan 25 2009, 10:44 PM
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That cake looks delicious wink.gif

Let's hope that New Horizons performs well until it's mission has finished. Me and my Girlfriend can't wait to see that Images from Plutos surface smile.gif!


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Guest_Oersted_*
post Jan 28 2009, 11:28 PM
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Absolutely great to see the team tip their (tin-foil? wink.gif ) hat to unmannedspaceflight.com!!

Thx for the link to the movie peter59.
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MarkG
post Feb 26 2009, 03:19 AM
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I know the formal search hasn't started yet, but have any KBO's been discovered yet that are in the post-Pluto possible trajectory cone?
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john_s
post Feb 26 2009, 03:27 AM
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In a word, nope. As you say, we haven't got started yet on the full-up search.

John.

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