New Horizons survived its flyby of Ultima Thule

Authored by astronomy.com and submitted by Thorne-ZytkowObject

New Horizons successfully "phoned home" at 10:28 a.m. EST, letting NASA scientists know all of its systems survived the flyby of Ultima Thule. The first real images will now slowly trickle in over the coming hours and days.

"We have a healthy spacecraft," Mission Operations Manager, "MOM," Alice Bowman announced to a crowd of cheering scientists Tuesday morning.

Not long after the stroke of midnight on New Year’s Day, as 2018 gave way to 2019, NASA's New Horizons spacecraft flew by the far-out space rock Ultima Thule. At 12:33 am EST this morning, the craft passed within 2,200 miles (3,540 km) of the Kuiper Belt Object (KBO), formally known as 2014 MU69. This was the farthest object that any craft has ever visited.

Now, New Horizons will beam the first information and images from this close flyby back to Earth. However, seeing as the exploratory spacecraft is about four billion miles (6.6 billion km) from our home planet, this data takes a while to travel back to Earth. In fact, it takes more than six hours for radio signals carrying information from New Horizons to deliver the data to NASA's Deep Space Network.

At 10:28 am EST today, New Horizons made its pre-programed “phone home,” letting the mission team back on Earth know that the craft completed the flyby unharmed. This call didn't include any information about the object, but later today the first science data and imagery of the far-out space rock will be available.

At 11:35 a.m. EST, NASA held a press conference to update the spacecraft status, including the latest images and data download schedule. The New Horizons team released an image taken before the flyby while the spacecraft was still roughly half a million miles from Ultima Thule.

"It's a better pixelated blob than the day before," said New Horizons Project Scientist Hal Weaver. However, the grainy image reveals Ultima Thule is shaped something like a spinning bowling pin.

StlCyclone on January 1st, 2019 at 16:22 UTC »

Can some one explain how we can hear a 25 watt transmitter that is 4,000,000,000 miles away? I find that mind boggling.

Repko on January 1st, 2019 at 16:03 UTC »

Snapshot of a rock 4 billion miles away sounding like a good wallpaper to me. Please be good shots.

trackedonwire on January 1st, 2019 at 15:44 UTC »

That trickle of images...

"At 10:28 am EST today, New Horizons made its pre-programed “phone home,” letting the mission team back on Earth know that the craft completed the flyby unharmed. This call didn't include any information about the object, but later today the first science data and imagery of the far-out space rock will be available.

At 3:15 pm EST, the first science data will arrive from the craft, including a grainy image just 100 pixels across. "