"What NASA's doing with New Horizons is uprecedented in our time and probably something close to the last train to Clarksville, the last picture show, for a very, very long time," says Stern, a planetary scientist with the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado.
It is the last stop in NASA's quest to explore every planet in our solar system, starting with Venus in 1962. And in a cosmic coincidence, the Pluto visit falls on the 50th anniversary of the first-ever flyby of Mars, by Mariner 4.
Yes, we all know Pluto is no longer an official planet, merely a dwarf, but it still enjoyed full planet status when New Horizons rocketed from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on Jan. 19, 2006. Pluto's demotion came just seven months later, a sore subject still for many.
Never before seen images of Pluto captured by spacecraft |
2 comments:
Pluto's in the same boat as Ceres.
Weren't there about 8 or 10 more planets like this that got all the other god names?
Y'know, Apollo, Haephestus (Vulcan), Athena, Pan (Dionysius)?
Is he still Mickey Mouse's dog?
Post a Comment