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New Horizons' First Science on a Post-Pluto Object
by Staff Writers
Laurel MD (SPX) May 20, 2016


New Horizons scientists used light curve data - the variations in the brightness of light reflected from the object's surface - to determine 1994 JR1's rotation period of 5.4 hours. Image courtesy NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute. For a larger version of this image please go here.

Warming up for a possible extended mission as it speeds through deep space, NASA's New Horizons spacecraft has now twice observed 1994 JR1, a 90-mile (145-kilometer) wide Kuiper Belt object (KBO) orbiting more than 3 billion miles (5 billion kilometers) from the Sun. Science team members have used these observations to reveal new facts about this distant remnant of the early solar system.

Taken with the spacecraft's Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) on April 7-8 from a distance of about 69 million miles (111 million kilometers), the images shatter New Horizons' own record for the closest-ever views of this KBO in November 2015, when New Horizons detected JR1 from 170 million miles (280 million kilometers) away.

Simon Porter, a New Horizons science team member from Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in Boulder, Colorado, said the observations contain several valuable findings.

"Combining the November 2015 and April 2016 observations allows us to pinpoint the location of JR1 to within 1,000 kilometers (about 600 miles), far better than any small KBO," he said, adding that the more accurate orbit also allows the science team to dispel a theory, suggested several years ago, that JR1 is a quasi-satellite of Pluto.

From the closer vantage point of the April 2016 observations, the team also determined the object's rotation period, observing the changes in light reflected from its surface to determine that a JR1 "day" is 5.4 hours. "That's relatively fast for a KBO," said science team member John Spencer, also from SwRI. "This is all part of the excitement of exploring new places and seeing things never seen before."

Spencer added that these observations are great practice for possible close-up looks at about 20 more ancient Kuiper Belt objects that may come in the next few years, should NASA approve an extended mission.

New Horizons flew through the Pluto system on July 14, 2015, making the first close-up observations of Pluto and its family of five moons. The spacecraft is on course for an ultra-close flyby of another Kuiper Belt object, 2014 MU69, on Jan. 1, 2019.


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Previous Report
OUTER PLANETS
Dwarf Planet Haumea's Lunar System Smaller than Anticipated
Melbourne FL (SPX) May 18, 2016
Haumea, a dwarf planet on the edge of our solar system, doesn't have the same kind of moons as its well-known cousin Pluto according to a new study. This is despite original evidence that suggested they both formed in similar giant impacts and adds to the mystery shrouding how these icy bodies formed. Haumea has two known satellites, an unusually high spin rate, and is also the "parent" of ... read more


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