NASA manages to do some good work in spite of the current regime. We've successfully completed the farthest ever fly-by of an object in space:
So, no pictures yet, but eventually.
This is a lot more exciting that a mythical wall.
I almost feel as though I should spend the day at the planetarium. Almost.
Via Joe.My.God.
NASA now has proof that its New Horizons probe completed its record-setting flyby of the Kuiper Belt object Ultima Thule. The mission team confirmed the flypast at 10:31AM Eastern Time after receiving telemetry data indicating that the spacecraft was "healthy." It technically flew past Ultima Thule at about 12:33AM , but the combination of data collection and the six-hour signal travel time left the New Horizons crew waiting until much later to receive the A-OK from their pride and joy.
Scientific data won't arrive until sometime around 200 UTC on January 2nd (9PM ET on January 1st). You'll have to wait a while for an up-close snapshot, then.
The confirmation isn't just a relief for the New Horizons team. This marks the farthest-ever flyby in human history -- at about 4 billion miles from the Sun, Ultima Thule makes Pluto seem like a next-door neighbor by comparison. It also promises a raft of potential scientific insights, including clues to the formation of dwarf planets. Some of those discoveries may take a long time, but they'll be worthwhile if they shed light on the Solar System and the cosmos at large.
So, no pictures yet, but eventually.
This is a lot more exciting that a mythical wall.
I almost feel as though I should spend the day at the planetarium. Almost.
Via Joe.My.God.
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