Rincewind
Philosopher
At the very least they are reaction mass that a robotic sample return mission could use some day.
And for winter sports!
At the very least they are reaction mass that a robotic sample return mission could use some day.
And the penguins!
And the polar bears that eat them.
I see a slight problem with that statement!
[qimg]http://i63.tinypic.com/k17t3n.jpg[/qimg]
Ok ill bite AHEM "Who's there?"Very old joke: What kind of penguins do polar bears eat?![]()
Time for more articles!
At Pluto, New Horizons Finds Geology of All Ages, Possible Ice Volcanoes, Insight into Planetary Origins
Blog: Radio Signals from Earth Probe Pluto's Atmosphere
A Day on Pluto, a Day on Charon
Pluto, Closer to Home
New Horizons Returns the First of Its Very Best Images of Pluto (clicking on the images at the bottom of the page will bring up an article associated with that image)
A Distant Close-up: New Horizons’ Camera Captures a Wandering Kuiper Belt Object
OMG, That Oscar Meyer one is making me corpse.This is a problem because I'm at work.
I saw this mentioned twice in the last linked article, " if an extended mission is approved.". What do they mean by that? Isn't New Horizons going to keep going on out into deep space whether an extended mission is approved or not? Are they just going to quit paying attention to it if it isn't approved? What am I missing?
Without the money to come up with a mission plan, software loads, all-important dish time, and personnel, it is just a warm box in the void and will do nothing much by itself.
Without the money to come up with a mission plan, software loads, all-important dish time, and personnel, it is just a warm box in the void and will do nothing much by itself.
"Don't make me turn this spaceship around!"
I sort of thought that might be the case, but I also figured as long as it's little atomic heart was beating it would just continue to shoot collected data back to use as it trudges it's way across the infinite.
Article time!
Zooming in on Pluto’s Pattern of Pits
Pluto’s Close-up, Now in Color
New Findings from New Horizons Shape Understanding of Pluto and its Moons
Where Math Meets Pluto
Looking Back at the ‘Year of Pluto’
Particles ‘Go with the Flow’ on Pluto’s Surface
‘X’ Marks a Curious Corner on Pluto’s Icy Plains
Greetings and Salutations!...This is my first blog entry about my experiences on this most excellent mission...
Dude, "Where Math Meets Pluto" is written by Bill and Ted!!
Whoooah!!!