The Kuiper belt (/ˈkaɪpər/, rhyming with "piper"), sometimes called the Edgeworth–Kuiper belt, is a region of the Solar System beyond the planets extending from the orbit of Neptune (at 30 AU) to approximately 50 AU from the Sun. It is similar to the asteroid belt, although it is far larger—20 times as wide and 20 to 200 times as massive. Like the asteroid belt, it consists mainly of small bodies, or remnants from the Solar System's formation. While most asteroids are composed primarily of rock and metal, Kuiper belt objects are composed largely of frozen volatiles (termed "ices"), such as methane, ammonia and water. The classical (low-eccentricity) belt is home to at least three dwarf planets: Pluto, Haumea, and Makemake. Some of the Solar System's moons, such as Neptune's Triton and Saturn's Phoebe, are also believed to have originated in the region.
Since the belt was discovered in 1992, the number of known Kuiper belt objects (KBOs) has increased to over a thousand, and more than 70,000 KBOs over 100 km (62 mi) in diameter are believed to exist. The Kuiper belt was initially thought to be the main repository for periodic comets, those with orbits lasting less than 200 years. However, studies since the mid-1990s have shown that the classical belt is dynamically stable, and that comets' true place of origin is the scattered disc, a dynamically active zone created by the outward motion of Neptune 4.5 billion years ago; scattered disc objects such as Eris have extremely eccentric orbits that take them as far as 100 AU from the Sun.
After years of searching, Clyde Tombaugh discovered tiny Pluto on February 18th, 1930, Little did he realize this was just one icy object in a vast belt of m...
44:27
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton (Documentary)
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton (Documentary)
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton (Documentary)
If You enjoy our videos add us to your favorites for much more!! =)
1:27
First Mission to Solar System’s 'Third Zone' - Kuiper Belt
First Mission to Solar System’s 'Third Zone' - Kuiper Belt
First Mission to Solar System’s 'Third Zone' - Kuiper Belt
NASA's New Horizons' principal investigator Dr. Alan Stern talks to Space.com about the importance of the mission to the "wild west" of our solar system, a place where no other probe has been. He says there is there is no other mission like this "on the books to ever happen again."
62:46
Kuiper Belt & The Tenth Planet Discovery
Kuiper Belt & The Tenth Planet Discovery
Kuiper Belt & The Tenth Planet Discovery
Mike Brown, The Discoverer of the Tenth Planet Eris, talks about the Kuiper Belt. "This is a video recording of the Sept. 15, 2011, lecture by Caltech astron...
44:27
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton
UFO - Alien.
2:47
Kuiper Belt
Kuiper Belt
Kuiper Belt
Dust ground off icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt, the cold-storage zone that includes Pluto and millions of other objects, creates a faint infrared disk potentially visible to alien astronomers looking for planets around the sun. Neptune's gravitational imprint on the dust is always detectable in new simulations of how this dust moves through the solar system. By ramping up the collision rate, the simulations show how the distant view of the solar system might have changed over its history.
62:36
The Kuiper Belt and its implications
The Kuiper Belt and its implications
The Kuiper Belt and its implications
Kavli Prize Laureate lecture in collaboration with the Kavli Foundation. The early solar system was not always the orderly place it is now. Professor Jane Lu...
45:32
New Horizons: Passport to Pluto and Beyond - Documentary [HD]
New Horizons: Passport to Pluto and Beyond - Documentary [HD]
New Horizons: Passport to Pluto and Beyond - Documentary [HD]
Mission Overview: Why Go to Pluto ? Planetary exploration is a historic endeavor and a major focus of NASA. New Horizons is designed to help us understand worlds at the edge of our solar system by making the first reconnaissance of Pluto and Charon - a "double planet" and the last planet in our solar system to be visited by spacecraft. Then, as part of an extended mission, New Horizons would visit one or more objects in the Kuiper Belt region beyond Neptune.
Science at the Frontier
Our solar system contains three zones: the inner, rocky planets; the gas giant planets; and the Kuiper Belt. Pluto is one of the largest bodies of the icy, "thir
5:03
3C Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud
3C Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud
3C Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud
description.
2:11
An Earth Sized Planet in the Kuiper Belt?
An Earth Sized Planet in the Kuiper Belt?
An Earth Sized Planet in the Kuiper Belt?
Evidence suggesting an Earth sized planet may exist in the Kuiper Belt. From Michael Brown's Fulldome Kavli Prize lecture March 5th, 2015. Produced by Mark SubbaRao and Patrick McPike of the Space Visualization Laboratory at the Adler Planetarium.
1:48
The Kuiper Belt - Scanning The Skies: The Discovery Telescope
The Kuiper Belt - Scanning The Skies: The Discovery Telescope
The Kuiper Belt - Scanning The Skies: The Discovery Telescope
One of the first projects for the Discovery telescope is to study the Kuiper Belt, a region outside of the planets of the Solar System.
Subscribe to Discovery TV for more great space clips:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=DiscoveryTV
Follow Discovery on Twitter:
http://www.twitter.com/DiscoveryUK
2:47
NASA | Dust Simulations Paint Alien's View of the Solar System
NASA | Dust Simulations Paint Alien's View of the Solar System
NASA | Dust Simulations Paint Alien's View of the Solar System
Dust ground off icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt, the cold-storage zone that includes Pluto and millions of other objects, creates a faint infrared disk potentially visible to alien astronomers looking for planets around the sun. Neptune's gravitational imprint on the dust is always detectable in new simulations of how this dust moves through the solar system. By ramping up the collision rate, the simulations show how the distant view of the solar system might have changed over its history.
This video is public domain and can be downloaded at: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/goto?10635
Like our videos? Subscribe to NASA's Goddard Shorts HD podca
7:46
Planet Pluto - King of the Kuiper Belt
Planet Pluto - King of the Kuiper Belt
Planet Pluto - King of the Kuiper Belt
Nigel Goes to Space
Join Nigel as he takes you on his journey to the stars and beyond!
Subscribe to Naked Science - http://goo.gl/wpc2Q1
New Horizons Mission to Pluto and the Kuiper Belt
Future Virgin Galactic Astronaut Nigel Henbest talks about the astonishing “New Horizons” mission to the edge of our solar system, an interplanetary space probe that was launched as part of NASA's New Frontiers program. Nigel is an internationally acclaimed science populariser and author, specialising in astronomy and space.
He discusses Plutonian geography and geology as revealed in the fascinating images sent back from the spacecraft’s flyby of Pluto
4:50
Finding Proof of the Kuiper Belt
Finding Proof of the Kuiper Belt
Finding Proof of the Kuiper Belt
Visitation of comets from the far reaches of the solar system suggested the existence of the Kuiper Belt. However, the relatively small size of the bodies theorized to exist beyond the planets made finding one an unbelievably difficult challenge. Finally, in 1992, astronomers located a slow moving object further out than any observed in our solar system. | http://science.discovery.com/tv-shows/how-the-universe-works/
Catch new episodes of HOW THE UNIVERSE WORKS Tuesdays at 10/9c on Science!
Watch full episodes:
http://bit.ly/HTUWFullEpisodes
Subscribe to Science Channel:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=sciencechannel
C
After years of searching, Clyde Tombaugh discovered tiny Pluto on February 18th, 1930, Little did he realize this was just one icy object in a vast belt of m...
44:27
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton (Documentary)
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton (Documentary)
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton (Documentary)
If You enjoy our videos add us to your favorites for much more!! =)
1:27
First Mission to Solar System’s 'Third Zone' - Kuiper Belt
First Mission to Solar System’s 'Third Zone' - Kuiper Belt
First Mission to Solar System’s 'Third Zone' - Kuiper Belt
NASA's New Horizons' principal investigator Dr. Alan Stern talks to Space.com about the importance of the mission to the "wild west" of our solar system, a place where no other probe has been. He says there is there is no other mission like this "on the books to ever happen again."
62:46
Kuiper Belt & The Tenth Planet Discovery
Kuiper Belt & The Tenth Planet Discovery
Kuiper Belt & The Tenth Planet Discovery
Mike Brown, The Discoverer of the Tenth Planet Eris, talks about the Kuiper Belt. "This is a video recording of the Sept. 15, 2011, lecture by Caltech astron...
44:27
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton
UFO - Alien.
2:47
Kuiper Belt
Kuiper Belt
Kuiper Belt
Dust ground off icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt, the cold-storage zone that includes Pluto and millions of other objects, creates a faint infrared disk potentially visible to alien astronomers looking for planets around the sun. Neptune's gravitational imprint on the dust is always detectable in new simulations of how this dust moves through the solar system. By ramping up the collision rate, the simulations show how the distant view of the solar system might have changed over its history.
62:36
The Kuiper Belt and its implications
The Kuiper Belt and its implications
The Kuiper Belt and its implications
Kavli Prize Laureate lecture in collaboration with the Kavli Foundation. The early solar system was not always the orderly place it is now. Professor Jane Lu...
45:32
New Horizons: Passport to Pluto and Beyond - Documentary [HD]
New Horizons: Passport to Pluto and Beyond - Documentary [HD]
New Horizons: Passport to Pluto and Beyond - Documentary [HD]
Mission Overview: Why Go to Pluto ? Planetary exploration is a historic endeavor and a major focus of NASA. New Horizons is designed to help us understand worlds at the edge of our solar system by making the first reconnaissance of Pluto and Charon - a "double planet" and the last planet in our solar system to be visited by spacecraft. Then, as part of an extended mission, New Horizons would visit one or more objects in the Kuiper Belt region beyond Neptune.
Science at the Frontier
Our solar system contains three zones: the inner, rocky planets; the gas giant planets; and the Kuiper Belt. Pluto is one of the largest bodies of the icy, "thir
5:03
3C Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud
3C Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud
3C Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud
description.
2:11
An Earth Sized Planet in the Kuiper Belt?
An Earth Sized Planet in the Kuiper Belt?
An Earth Sized Planet in the Kuiper Belt?
Evidence suggesting an Earth sized planet may exist in the Kuiper Belt. From Michael Brown's Fulldome Kavli Prize lecture March 5th, 2015. Produced by Mark SubbaRao and Patrick McPike of the Space Visualization Laboratory at the Adler Planetarium.
1:48
The Kuiper Belt - Scanning The Skies: The Discovery Telescope
The Kuiper Belt - Scanning The Skies: The Discovery Telescope
The Kuiper Belt - Scanning The Skies: The Discovery Telescope
One of the first projects for the Discovery telescope is to study the Kuiper Belt, a region outside of the planets of the Solar System.
Subscribe to Discovery TV for more great space clips:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=DiscoveryTV
Follow Discovery on Twitter:
http://www.twitter.com/DiscoveryUK
2:47
NASA | Dust Simulations Paint Alien's View of the Solar System
NASA | Dust Simulations Paint Alien's View of the Solar System
NASA | Dust Simulations Paint Alien's View of the Solar System
Dust ground off icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt, the cold-storage zone that includes Pluto and millions of other objects, creates a faint infrared disk potentially visible to alien astronomers looking for planets around the sun. Neptune's gravitational imprint on the dust is always detectable in new simulations of how this dust moves through the solar system. By ramping up the collision rate, the simulations show how the distant view of the solar system might have changed over its history.
This video is public domain and can be downloaded at: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/goto?10635
Like our videos? Subscribe to NASA's Goddard Shorts HD podca
7:46
Planet Pluto - King of the Kuiper Belt
Planet Pluto - King of the Kuiper Belt
Planet Pluto - King of the Kuiper Belt
Nigel Goes to Space
Join Nigel as he takes you on his journey to the stars and beyond!
Subscribe to Naked Science - http://goo.gl/wpc2Q1
New Horizons Mission to Pluto and the Kuiper Belt
Future Virgin Galactic Astronaut Nigel Henbest talks about the astonishing “New Horizons” mission to the edge of our solar system, an interplanetary space probe that was launched as part of NASA's New Frontiers program. Nigel is an internationally acclaimed science populariser and author, specialising in astronomy and space.
He discusses Plutonian geography and geology as revealed in the fascinating images sent back from the spacecraft’s flyby of Pluto
4:50
Finding Proof of the Kuiper Belt
Finding Proof of the Kuiper Belt
Finding Proof of the Kuiper Belt
Visitation of comets from the far reaches of the solar system suggested the existence of the Kuiper Belt. However, the relatively small size of the bodies theorized to exist beyond the planets made finding one an unbelievably difficult challenge. Finally, in 1992, astronomers located a slow moving object further out than any observed in our solar system. | http://science.discovery.com/tv-shows/how-the-universe-works/
Catch new episodes of HOW THE UNIVERSE WORKS Tuesdays at 10/9c on Science!
Watch full episodes:
http://bit.ly/HTUWFullEpisodes
Subscribe to Science Channel:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=sciencechannel
C
3:17
Kuiper belt "objects"
Kuiper belt "objects"
Kuiper belt "objects"
What lurks at the outer edge of our solar system?
1:16
Pluto, the Plutoids, and the Kuiper Belt
Pluto, the Plutoids, and the Kuiper Belt
Pluto, the Plutoids, and the Kuiper Belt
The Ashcroft Observatory is hosting a seminar on Pluto, the Plutoids, and the Kuiper Belt, Saturday, September 1, 2012 at 5:00 pm at the observatory. For mor...
63:16
Pluto, the Kuiper belt and the early history of the solar system - Renu Malhotra (SETI Talks)
Pluto, the Kuiper belt and the early history of the solar system - Renu Malhotra (SETI Talks)
Pluto, the Kuiper belt and the early history of the solar system - Renu Malhotra (SETI Talks)
Our understanding of the formation of the solar system has undergone a revolution in recent years, owing to new theoretical insights into the origin of Pluto and the discovery of the Kuiper belt and its complex dynamical structure. The emerging picture is one of dramatic orbital migration of the planets in the early history of the solar system, driven by interaction with the primordial Kuiper belt, which produced the final solar system architecture that we live in today. The evidence is all over the solar system, as close as the Moon and as far away as Pluto and the remnant Kuiper belt. Dr. Malhotra will review this new view of our solar s
45:32
Planetary Exploration, Passport to Pluto, Charon and the Kuiper Belt Trans-Neptunian Region
Planetary Exploration, Passport to Pluto, Charon and the Kuiper Belt Trans-Neptunian Region
Planetary Exploration, Passport to Pluto, Charon and the Kuiper Belt Trans-Neptunian Region
NASA New Horizons mission Update, After careful consideration and analysis, the Hubble Space Telescope Time Allocation Committee has recommended using Hubble to search for an object the ...
4:30
Cinturón de Kuiper y Nube de Oort (Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud)
Cinturón de Kuiper y Nube de Oort (Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud)
Cinturón de Kuiper y Nube de Oort (Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud)
Descripción en palabras sencillas del Cinturón de Kuiper y la Nube de Oort (Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud), las partes más lejanas de nuestro Sistema Solar, además de imagenes artisticas de los mismos.
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Este es mi segundo video de astronomia, ojala que les guste este tipo de temas y les guste el video en si, espero que lo disfruten.
4:04
The Oort Cloud: Believe it or Not
The Oort Cloud: Believe it or Not
The Oort Cloud: Believe it or Not
Learn about the Oort Cloud with host Reid Reimers on this episode of SciShow Space! ---------- Like SciShow? Want to help support us, and also get things to ...
12:28
"Kuiper Belt Connection" - Exclusive Sneak Peek!
"Kuiper Belt Connection" - Exclusive Sneak Peek!
"Kuiper Belt Connection" - Exclusive Sneak Peek!
http://expansions.com
Stewart and Janet Swerdlow presented their 11th Annual Conference in October of 2013, the long awaited "Kuiper Belt Connection", which is now available for viewing in its entirety, only in the Gold Members section of Expansions.com.
10:55
Kuiper Belt Aliens and the 4th Reich
Kuiper Belt Aliens and the 4th Reich
Kuiper Belt Aliens and the 4th Reich
The Kuiper Belt is an area or space surrounding the outer portion of our solar system. For the last decade mainstream scientists in NASA and other places hav...
After years of searching, Clyde Tombaugh discovered tiny Pluto on February 18th, 1930, Little did he realize this was just one icy object in a vast belt of m...
After years of searching, Clyde Tombaugh discovered tiny Pluto on February 18th, 1930, Little did he realize this was just one icy object in a vast belt of m...
NASA's New Horizons' principal investigator Dr. Alan Stern talks to Space.com about the importance of the mission to the "wild west" of our solar system, a place where no other probe has been. He says there is there is no other mission like this "on the books to ever happen again."
NASA's New Horizons' principal investigator Dr. Alan Stern talks to Space.com about the importance of the mission to the "wild west" of our solar system, a place where no other probe has been. He says there is there is no other mission like this "on the books to ever happen again."
Mike Brown, The Discoverer of the Tenth Planet Eris, talks about the Kuiper Belt. "This is a video recording of the Sept. 15, 2011, lecture by Caltech astron...
Mike Brown, The Discoverer of the Tenth Planet Eris, talks about the Kuiper Belt. "This is a video recording of the Sept. 15, 2011, lecture by Caltech astron...
Dust ground off icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt, the cold-storage zone that includes Pluto and millions of other objects, creates a faint infrared disk potentially visible to alien astronomers looking for planets around the sun. Neptune's gravitational imprint on the dust is always detectable in new simulations of how this dust moves through the solar system. By ramping up the collision rate, the simulations show how the distant view of the solar system might have changed over its history.
Dust ground off icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt, the cold-storage zone that includes Pluto and millions of other objects, creates a faint infrared disk potentially visible to alien astronomers looking for planets around the sun. Neptune's gravitational imprint on the dust is always detectable in new simulations of how this dust moves through the solar system. By ramping up the collision rate, the simulations show how the distant view of the solar system might have changed over its history.
Kavli Prize Laureate lecture in collaboration with the Kavli Foundation. The early solar system was not always the orderly place it is now. Professor Jane Lu...
Kavli Prize Laureate lecture in collaboration with the Kavli Foundation. The early solar system was not always the orderly place it is now. Professor Jane Lu...
Mission Overview: Why Go to Pluto ? Planetary exploration is a historic endeavor and a major focus of NASA. New Horizons is designed to help us understand worlds at the edge of our solar system by making the first reconnaissance of Pluto and Charon - a "double planet" and the last planet in our solar system to be visited by spacecraft. Then, as part of an extended mission, New Horizons would visit one or more objects in the Kuiper Belt region beyond Neptune.
Science at the Frontier
Our solar system contains three zones: the inner, rocky planets; the gas giant planets; and the Kuiper Belt. Pluto is one of the largest bodies of the icy, "third zone" of our solar system. The National Academy of Sciences placed the exploration of the third zone in general - and Pluto-Charon in particular - among its highest priority planetary mission rankings for this decade. New Horizons is NASA's mission to fulfill this objective.
In those zones, our solar system has three classes of planets: the rocky worlds (Earth, Venus, Mercury and Mars); the gas giants (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune); and the ice dwarfs of the Kuiper Belt. There are far more ice dwarf planets than rocky and gas giant worlds combined - yet, no spacecraft has been sent to a planet in this class. The National Academy of Sciences noted that our knowledge of planetary types is therefore seriously incomplete. As the first mission to investigate this new class of planetary bodies, New Horizons will fill this important gap and round out our knowledge of the planets in our solar system.
Ancient Relics
The ice dwarfs are planetary embryos, whose growth stopped at sizes (200 to 2,000 kilometers across) much smaller than the full-grown planets in the inner solar system and the gas giants region. The ice dwarfs are ancient relics that formed over 4 billion years ago. Because they are literally the bodies out of which the larger planets accumulated, the ice dwarfs have a great deal to teach us about planetary formation. New Horizons seeks those answers.
Binary Planet
Pluto's largest moon, Charon, is half the size of Pluto. The pair form a binary planet, whose gravitational balance point is between the two bodies. Although binary planets are thought to be common in the galaxy, as are binary stars, no spacecraft has yet explored one. New Horizons will be the first mission to a binary object of any type.
A Mission with Impact
The Kuiper Belt is the major source of cometary impactors on Earth, like the impactor that wiped out the dinosaurs. New Horizons will shed new light on the number of such Kuiper Belt impactors as a function of their size by cataloging the various-sized craters on Pluto, its moons, and on Kuiper Belt Objects.
Pluto and the Kuiper Belt are known to be heavily endowed with organic (carbon-bearing) molecules and water ice — the raw materials out of which life evolves. New Horizons will explore the composition of this material on the surfaces of Pluto, its moons and Kuiper Belt Objects.
The Great Escape
Pluto's atmosphere is escaping to space like a comet, but on a planetary scale. Nothing like this exists anywhere else in the solar system. It is thought that the Earth's original hydrogen/helium atmosphere was lost to space this way. By studying Pluto's atmospheric escape, we can learn a great deal about the evolution of Earth's atmosphere. New Horizons will determine Pluto's atmospheric structure and composition and directly measure its escape rate for the first time.
The Need to Explore
As the first voyage to a whole new class of planets in the farthest zone of the solar system, New Horizons is a historic mission of exploration. The United States has made history by being the first nation to reach every planet from Mercury to Neptune with a space probe. The New Horizons mission to Pluto and the Kuiper Belt - the first NASA launch to a "new" planet since Voyager more than 30 years ago - allows the U.S. to complete the reconnaissance of the solar system.
See more videos about
"New Horizons: NASA's Pluto-Kuiper Belt Space Mission",
please visit: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6vzpF_OEV8kWXbzL18yNEYwc-UZGbNNK
This is the 2010 version. To see the first version "Passport to Pluto" (2006), click here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pfQ_cpUq6nI.
See more videos about the dwarf planet Eris:
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6vzpF_OEV8m4RICSKSe63ZY5YceATGAN
Release Date: 2010
Credit: NASA
Mission Overview: Why Go to Pluto ? Planetary exploration is a historic endeavor and a major focus of NASA. New Horizons is designed to help us understand worlds at the edge of our solar system by making the first reconnaissance of Pluto and Charon - a "double planet" and the last planet in our solar system to be visited by spacecraft. Then, as part of an extended mission, New Horizons would visit one or more objects in the Kuiper Belt region beyond Neptune.
Science at the Frontier
Our solar system contains three zones: the inner, rocky planets; the gas giant planets; and the Kuiper Belt. Pluto is one of the largest bodies of the icy, "third zone" of our solar system. The National Academy of Sciences placed the exploration of the third zone in general - and Pluto-Charon in particular - among its highest priority planetary mission rankings for this decade. New Horizons is NASA's mission to fulfill this objective.
In those zones, our solar system has three classes of planets: the rocky worlds (Earth, Venus, Mercury and Mars); the gas giants (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune); and the ice dwarfs of the Kuiper Belt. There are far more ice dwarf planets than rocky and gas giant worlds combined - yet, no spacecraft has been sent to a planet in this class. The National Academy of Sciences noted that our knowledge of planetary types is therefore seriously incomplete. As the first mission to investigate this new class of planetary bodies, New Horizons will fill this important gap and round out our knowledge of the planets in our solar system.
Ancient Relics
The ice dwarfs are planetary embryos, whose growth stopped at sizes (200 to 2,000 kilometers across) much smaller than the full-grown planets in the inner solar system and the gas giants region. The ice dwarfs are ancient relics that formed over 4 billion years ago. Because they are literally the bodies out of which the larger planets accumulated, the ice dwarfs have a great deal to teach us about planetary formation. New Horizons seeks those answers.
Binary Planet
Pluto's largest moon, Charon, is half the size of Pluto. The pair form a binary planet, whose gravitational balance point is between the two bodies. Although binary planets are thought to be common in the galaxy, as are binary stars, no spacecraft has yet explored one. New Horizons will be the first mission to a binary object of any type.
A Mission with Impact
The Kuiper Belt is the major source of cometary impactors on Earth, like the impactor that wiped out the dinosaurs. New Horizons will shed new light on the number of such Kuiper Belt impactors as a function of their size by cataloging the various-sized craters on Pluto, its moons, and on Kuiper Belt Objects.
Pluto and the Kuiper Belt are known to be heavily endowed with organic (carbon-bearing) molecules and water ice — the raw materials out of which life evolves. New Horizons will explore the composition of this material on the surfaces of Pluto, its moons and Kuiper Belt Objects.
The Great Escape
Pluto's atmosphere is escaping to space like a comet, but on a planetary scale. Nothing like this exists anywhere else in the solar system. It is thought that the Earth's original hydrogen/helium atmosphere was lost to space this way. By studying Pluto's atmospheric escape, we can learn a great deal about the evolution of Earth's atmosphere. New Horizons will determine Pluto's atmospheric structure and composition and directly measure its escape rate for the first time.
The Need to Explore
As the first voyage to a whole new class of planets in the farthest zone of the solar system, New Horizons is a historic mission of exploration. The United States has made history by being the first nation to reach every planet from Mercury to Neptune with a space probe. The New Horizons mission to Pluto and the Kuiper Belt - the first NASA launch to a "new" planet since Voyager more than 30 years ago - allows the U.S. to complete the reconnaissance of the solar system.
See more videos about
"New Horizons: NASA's Pluto-Kuiper Belt Space Mission",
please visit: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6vzpF_OEV8kWXbzL18yNEYwc-UZGbNNK
This is the 2010 version. To see the first version "Passport to Pluto" (2006), click here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pfQ_cpUq6nI.
See more videos about the dwarf planet Eris:
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6vzpF_OEV8m4RICSKSe63ZY5YceATGAN
Release Date: 2010
Credit: NASA
Evidence suggesting an Earth sized planet may exist in the Kuiper Belt. From Michael Brown's Fulldome Kavli Prize lecture March 5th, 2015. Produced by Mark SubbaRao and Patrick McPike of the Space Visualization Laboratory at the Adler Planetarium.
Evidence suggesting an Earth sized planet may exist in the Kuiper Belt. From Michael Brown's Fulldome Kavli Prize lecture March 5th, 2015. Produced by Mark SubbaRao and Patrick McPike of the Space Visualization Laboratory at the Adler Planetarium.
published:20 Mar 2015
views:11
The Kuiper Belt - Scanning The Skies: The Discovery Telescope
One of the first projects for the Discovery telescope is to study the Kuiper Belt, a region outside of the planets of the Solar System.
Subscribe to Discovery TV for more great space clips:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=DiscoveryTV
Follow Discovery on Twitter:
http://www.twitter.com/DiscoveryUK
One of the first projects for the Discovery telescope is to study the Kuiper Belt, a region outside of the planets of the Solar System.
Subscribe to Discovery TV for more great space clips:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=DiscoveryTV
Follow Discovery on Twitter:
http://www.twitter.com/DiscoveryUK
published:10 Dec 2012
views:7525
NASA | Dust Simulations Paint Alien's View of the Solar System
Dust ground off icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt, the cold-storage zone that includes Pluto and millions of other objects, creates a faint infrared disk potentially visible to alien astronomers looking for planets around the sun. Neptune's gravitational imprint on the dust is always detectable in new simulations of how this dust moves through the solar system. By ramping up the collision rate, the simulations show how the distant view of the solar system might have changed over its history.
This video is public domain and can be downloaded at: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/goto?10635
Like our videos? Subscribe to NASA's Goddard Shorts HD podcast:
http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/iTunes/f0004_index.html
Or find NASA Goddard Space Flight Center on facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/NASA.GSFC
Or find us on Twitter:
http://twitter.com/NASAGoddard
Dust ground off icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt, the cold-storage zone that includes Pluto and millions of other objects, creates a faint infrared disk potentially visible to alien astronomers looking for planets around the sun. Neptune's gravitational imprint on the dust is always detectable in new simulations of how this dust moves through the solar system. By ramping up the collision rate, the simulations show how the distant view of the solar system might have changed over its history.
This video is public domain and can be downloaded at: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/goto?10635
Like our videos? Subscribe to NASA's Goddard Shorts HD podcast:
http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/iTunes/f0004_index.html
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Nigel Goes to Space
Join Nigel as he takes you on his journey to the stars and beyond!
Subscribe to Naked Science - http://goo.gl/wpc2Q1
New Horizons Mission to Pluto and the Kuiper Belt
Future Virgin Galactic Astronaut Nigel Henbest talks about the astonishing “New Horizons” mission to the edge of our solar system, an interplanetary space probe that was launched as part of NASA's New Frontiers program. Nigel is an internationally acclaimed science populariser and author, specialising in astronomy and space.
He discusses Plutonian geography and geology as revealed in the fascinating images sent back from the spacecraft’s flyby of Pluto and its intriguing moon Charon. Pluto is an ice dwarf located in the Kuiper belt, a ring of bodies beyond Neptune. In 2006 it was reclassified by the International Astronomical Union as a dwarf planet, specifically a plutoid.
Also mentioned are the Perseids, a prolific meteor shower associated with the comet Swift-Tuttle. The peak of the next spectacular shower expected on 12th August 2015.
Credits: NASA / Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory / Southwest Research Institute
Nigel Goes to Space
Join Nigel as he takes you on his journey to the stars and beyond!
Subscribe to Naked Science - http://goo.gl/wpc2Q1
New Horizons Mission to Pluto and the Kuiper Belt
Future Virgin Galactic Astronaut Nigel Henbest talks about the astonishing “New Horizons” mission to the edge of our solar system, an interplanetary space probe that was launched as part of NASA's New Frontiers program. Nigel is an internationally acclaimed science populariser and author, specialising in astronomy and space.
He discusses Plutonian geography and geology as revealed in the fascinating images sent back from the spacecraft’s flyby of Pluto and its intriguing moon Charon. Pluto is an ice dwarf located in the Kuiper belt, a ring of bodies beyond Neptune. In 2006 it was reclassified by the International Astronomical Union as a dwarf planet, specifically a plutoid.
Also mentioned are the Perseids, a prolific meteor shower associated with the comet Swift-Tuttle. The peak of the next spectacular shower expected on 12th August 2015.
Credits: NASA / Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory / Southwest Research Institute
Visitation of comets from the far reaches of the solar system suggested the existence of the Kuiper Belt. However, the relatively small size of the bodies theorized to exist beyond the planets made finding one an unbelievably difficult challenge. Finally, in 1992, astronomers located a slow moving object further out than any observed in our solar system. | http://science.discovery.com/tv-shows/how-the-universe-works/
Catch new episodes of HOW THE UNIVERSE WORKS Tuesdays at 10/9c on Science!
Watch full episodes:
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Subscribe to Science Channel:
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Check out SCI2 for infinitely awesome science videos. Every day.
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Visitation of comets from the far reaches of the solar system suggested the existence of the Kuiper Belt. However, the relatively small size of the bodies theorized to exist beyond the planets made finding one an unbelievably difficult challenge. Finally, in 1992, astronomers located a slow moving object further out than any observed in our solar system. | http://science.discovery.com/tv-shows/how-the-universe-works/
Catch new episodes of HOW THE UNIVERSE WORKS Tuesdays at 10/9c on Science!
Watch full episodes:
http://bit.ly/HTUWFullEpisodes
Subscribe to Science Channel:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=sciencechannel
Check out SCI2 for infinitely awesome science videos. Every day.
http://bit.ly/SCI2YT
Download the TestTube app:
http://testu.be/1ndmmMq
The Ashcroft Observatory is hosting a seminar on Pluto, the Plutoids, and the Kuiper Belt, Saturday, September 1, 2012 at 5:00 pm at the observatory. For mor...
The Ashcroft Observatory is hosting a seminar on Pluto, the Plutoids, and the Kuiper Belt, Saturday, September 1, 2012 at 5:00 pm at the observatory. For mor...
Our understanding of the formation of the solar system has undergone a revolution in recent years, owing to new theoretical insights into the origin of Pluto and the discovery of the Kuiper belt and its complex dynamical structure. The emerging picture is one of dramatic orbital migration of the planets in the early history of the solar system, driven by interaction with the primordial Kuiper belt, which produced the final solar system architecture that we live in today. The evidence is all over the solar system, as close as the Moon and as far away as Pluto and the remnant Kuiper belt. Dr. Malhotra will review this new view of our solar system's history, describe the astronomical evidence, and critically assess current theoretical models.
Our understanding of the formation of the solar system has undergone a revolution in recent years, owing to new theoretical insights into the origin of Pluto and the discovery of the Kuiper belt and its complex dynamical structure. The emerging picture is one of dramatic orbital migration of the planets in the early history of the solar system, driven by interaction with the primordial Kuiper belt, which produced the final solar system architecture that we live in today. The evidence is all over the solar system, as close as the Moon and as far away as Pluto and the remnant Kuiper belt. Dr. Malhotra will review this new view of our solar system's history, describe the astronomical evidence, and critically assess current theoretical models.
published:30 Jul 2015
views:272
Planetary Exploration, Passport to Pluto, Charon and the Kuiper Belt Trans-Neptunian Region
NASA New Horizons mission Update, After careful consideration and analysis, the Hubble Space Telescope Time Allocation Committee has recommended using Hubble to search for an object the ...
NASA New Horizons mission Update, After careful consideration and analysis, the Hubble Space Telescope Time Allocation Committee has recommended using Hubble to search for an object the ...
Descripción en palabras sencillas del Cinturón de Kuiper y la Nube de Oort (Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud), las partes más lejanas de nuestro Sistema Solar, además de imagenes artisticas de los mismos.
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Este es mi segundo video de astronomia, ojala que les guste este tipo de temas y les guste el video en si, espero que lo disfruten.
Descripción en palabras sencillas del Cinturón de Kuiper y la Nube de Oort (Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud), las partes más lejanas de nuestro Sistema Solar, además de imagenes artisticas de los mismos.
MauricioMPG228. Suscribanse. Ponganle Me Gusta
Dale Me Gusta al Facebook http://www.facebook.com/allmortalkombat150m/
Sigueme en Twitter: https://twitter.com/MauricioMPG228
Visita la web http://www.allmortalkombat.150m.com/
Este es mi segundo video de astronomia, ojala que les guste este tipo de temas y les guste el video en si, espero que lo disfruten.
Learn about the Oort Cloud with host Reid Reimers on this episode of SciShow Space! ---------- Like SciShow? Want to help support us, and also get things to ...
Learn about the Oort Cloud with host Reid Reimers on this episode of SciShow Space! ---------- Like SciShow? Want to help support us, and also get things to ...
http://expansions.com
Stewart and Janet Swerdlow presented their 11th Annual Conference in October of 2013, the long awaited "Kuiper Belt Connection", which is now available for viewing in its entirety, only in the Gold Members section of Expansions.com.
http://expansions.com
Stewart and Janet Swerdlow presented their 11th Annual Conference in October of 2013, the long awaited "Kuiper Belt Connection", which is now available for viewing in its entirety, only in the Gold Members section of Expansions.com.
The Kuiper Belt is an area or space surrounding the outer portion of our solar system. For the last decade mainstream scientists in NASA and other places hav...
The Kuiper Belt is an area or space surrounding the outer portion of our solar system. For the last decade mainstream scientists in NASA and other places hav...
After years of searching, Clyde Tombaugh discovered tiny Pluto on February 18th, 1930, Little did he realize this was just one icy object in a vast belt of m...
44:27
Kuiper Belt Objects and Io, Europa & Triton (Documentary)
If You enjoy our videos add us to your favorites for much more!! =)...
If You enjoy our videos add us to your favorites for much more!! =)
1:27
First Mission to Solar System’s 'Third Zone' - Kuiper Belt
NASA's New Horizons' principal investigator Dr. Alan Stern talks to Space.com about the im...
published:24 Mar 2015
First Mission to Solar System’s 'Third Zone' - Kuiper Belt
First Mission to Solar System’s 'Third Zone' - Kuiper Belt
published:24 Mar 2015
views:622
NASA's New Horizons' principal investigator Dr. Alan Stern talks to Space.com about the importance of the mission to the "wild west" of our solar system, a place where no other probe has been. He says there is there is no other mission like this "on the books to ever happen again."
62:46
Kuiper Belt & The Tenth Planet Discovery
Mike Brown, The Discoverer of the Tenth Planet Eris, talks about the Kuiper Belt. "This is...
Mike Brown, The Discoverer of the Tenth Planet Eris, talks about the Kuiper Belt. "This is a video recording of the Sept. 15, 2011, lecture by Caltech astron...
Dust ground off icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt, the cold-storage zone that includes Pluto a...
published:25 Sep 2010
Kuiper Belt
Kuiper Belt
published:25 Sep 2010
views:23407
Dust ground off icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt, the cold-storage zone that includes Pluto and millions of other objects, creates a faint infrared disk potentially visible to alien astronomers looking for planets around the sun. Neptune's gravitational imprint on the dust is always detectable in new simulations of how this dust moves through the solar system. By ramping up the collision rate, the simulations show how the distant view of the solar system might have changed over its history.
62:36
The Kuiper Belt and its implications
Kavli Prize Laureate lecture in collaboration with the Kavli Foundation. The early solar s...
Kavli Prize Laureate lecture in collaboration with the Kavli Foundation. The early solar system was not always the orderly place it is now. Professor Jane Lu...
45:32
New Horizons: Passport to Pluto and Beyond - Documentary [HD]
Mission Overview: Why Go to Pluto ? Planetary exploration is a historic endeavor and a maj...
published:18 Jun 2013
New Horizons: Passport to Pluto and Beyond - Documentary [HD]
New Horizons: Passport to Pluto and Beyond - Documentary [HD]
published:18 Jun 2013
views:463632
Mission Overview: Why Go to Pluto ? Planetary exploration is a historic endeavor and a major focus of NASA. New Horizons is designed to help us understand worlds at the edge of our solar system by making the first reconnaissance of Pluto and Charon - a "double planet" and the last planet in our solar system to be visited by spacecraft. Then, as part of an extended mission, New Horizons would visit one or more objects in the Kuiper Belt region beyond Neptune.
Science at the Frontier
Our solar system contains three zones: the inner, rocky planets; the gas giant planets; and the Kuiper Belt. Pluto is one of the largest bodies of the icy, "third zone" of our solar system. The National Academy of Sciences placed the exploration of the third zone in general - and Pluto-Charon in particular - among its highest priority planetary mission rankings for this decade. New Horizons is NASA's mission to fulfill this objective.
In those zones, our solar system has three classes of planets: the rocky worlds (Earth, Venus, Mercury and Mars); the gas giants (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune); and the ice dwarfs of the Kuiper Belt. There are far more ice dwarf planets than rocky and gas giant worlds combined - yet, no spacecraft has been sent to a planet in this class. The National Academy of Sciences noted that our knowledge of planetary types is therefore seriously incomplete. As the first mission to investigate this new class of planetary bodies, New Horizons will fill this important gap and round out our knowledge of the planets in our solar system.
Ancient Relics
The ice dwarfs are planetary embryos, whose growth stopped at sizes (200 to 2,000 kilometers across) much smaller than the full-grown planets in the inner solar system and the gas giants region. The ice dwarfs are ancient relics that formed over 4 billion years ago. Because they are literally the bodies out of which the larger planets accumulated, the ice dwarfs have a great deal to teach us about planetary formation. New Horizons seeks those answers.
Binary Planet
Pluto's largest moon, Charon, is half the size of Pluto. The pair form a binary planet, whose gravitational balance point is between the two bodies. Although binary planets are thought to be common in the galaxy, as are binary stars, no spacecraft has yet explored one. New Horizons will be the first mission to a binary object of any type.
A Mission with Impact
The Kuiper Belt is the major source of cometary impactors on Earth, like the impactor that wiped out the dinosaurs. New Horizons will shed new light on the number of such Kuiper Belt impactors as a function of their size by cataloging the various-sized craters on Pluto, its moons, and on Kuiper Belt Objects.
Pluto and the Kuiper Belt are known to be heavily endowed with organic (carbon-bearing) molecules and water ice — the raw materials out of which life evolves. New Horizons will explore the composition of this material on the surfaces of Pluto, its moons and Kuiper Belt Objects.
The Great Escape
Pluto's atmosphere is escaping to space like a comet, but on a planetary scale. Nothing like this exists anywhere else in the solar system. It is thought that the Earth's original hydrogen/helium atmosphere was lost to space this way. By studying Pluto's atmospheric escape, we can learn a great deal about the evolution of Earth's atmosphere. New Horizons will determine Pluto's atmospheric structure and composition and directly measure its escape rate for the first time.
The Need to Explore
As the first voyage to a whole new class of planets in the farthest zone of the solar system, New Horizons is a historic mission of exploration. The United States has made history by being the first nation to reach every planet from Mercury to Neptune with a space probe. The New Horizons mission to Pluto and the Kuiper Belt - the first NASA launch to a "new" planet since Voyager more than 30 years ago - allows the U.S. to complete the reconnaissance of the solar system.
See more videos about
"New Horizons: NASA's Pluto-Kuiper Belt Space Mission",
please visit: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6vzpF_OEV8kWXbzL18yNEYwc-UZGbNNK
This is the 2010 version. To see the first version "Passport to Pluto" (2006), click here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pfQ_cpUq6nI.
See more videos about the dwarf planet Eris:
http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6vzpF_OEV8m4RICSKSe63ZY5YceATGAN
Release Date: 2010
Credit: NASA
Evidence suggesting an Earth sized planet may exist in the Kuiper Belt. From Michael Brown...
published:20 Mar 2015
An Earth Sized Planet in the Kuiper Belt?
An Earth Sized Planet in the Kuiper Belt?
published:20 Mar 2015
views:11
Evidence suggesting an Earth sized planet may exist in the Kuiper Belt. From Michael Brown's Fulldome Kavli Prize lecture March 5th, 2015. Produced by Mark SubbaRao and Patrick McPike of the Space Visualization Laboratory at the Adler Planetarium.
1:48
The Kuiper Belt - Scanning The Skies: The Discovery Telescope
One of the first projects for the Discovery telescope is to study the Kuiper Belt, a regio...
published:10 Dec 2012
The Kuiper Belt - Scanning The Skies: The Discovery Telescope
The Kuiper Belt - Scanning The Skies: The Discovery Telescope
published:10 Dec 2012
views:7525
One of the first projects for the Discovery telescope is to study the Kuiper Belt, a region outside of the planets of the Solar System.
Subscribe to Discovery TV for more great space clips:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=DiscoveryTV
Follow Discovery on Twitter:
http://www.twitter.com/DiscoveryUK
2:47
NASA | Dust Simulations Paint Alien's View of the Solar System
Dust ground off icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt, the cold-storage zone that includes Pluto a...
published:23 Sep 2010
NASA | Dust Simulations Paint Alien's View of the Solar System
NASA | Dust Simulations Paint Alien's View of the Solar System
published:23 Sep 2010
views:143826
Dust ground off icy bodies in the Kuiper Belt, the cold-storage zone that includes Pluto and millions of other objects, creates a faint infrared disk potentially visible to alien astronomers looking for planets around the sun. Neptune's gravitational imprint on the dust is always detectable in new simulations of how this dust moves through the solar system. By ramping up the collision rate, the simulations show how the distant view of the solar system might have changed over its history.
This video is public domain and can be downloaded at: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/goto?10635
Like our videos? Subscribe to NASA's Goddard Shorts HD podcast:
http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/iTunes/f0004_index.html
Or find NASA Goddard Space Flight Center on facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/NASA.GSFC
Or find us on Twitter:
http://twitter.com/NASAGoddard
7:46
Planet Pluto - King of the Kuiper Belt
Nigel Goes to Space
Join Nigel as he takes you on his journey to the stars and beyond!
S...
published:05 Aug 2015
Planet Pluto - King of the Kuiper Belt
Planet Pluto - King of the Kuiper Belt
published:05 Aug 2015
views:827
Nigel Goes to Space
Join Nigel as he takes you on his journey to the stars and beyond!
Subscribe to Naked Science - http://goo.gl/wpc2Q1
New Horizons Mission to Pluto and the Kuiper Belt
Future Virgin Galactic Astronaut Nigel Henbest talks about the astonishing “New Horizons” mission to the edge of our solar system, an interplanetary space probe that was launched as part of NASA's New Frontiers program. Nigel is an internationally acclaimed science populariser and author, specialising in astronomy and space.
He discusses Plutonian geography and geology as revealed in the fascinating images sent back from the spacecraft’s flyby of Pluto and its intriguing moon Charon. Pluto is an ice dwarf located in the Kuiper belt, a ring of bodies beyond Neptune. In 2006 it was reclassified by the International Astronomical Union as a dwarf planet, specifically a plutoid.
Also mentioned are the Perseids, a prolific meteor shower associated with the comet Swift-Tuttle. The peak of the next spectacular shower expected on 12th August 2015.
Credits: NASA / Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory / Southwest Research Institute
4:50
Finding Proof of the Kuiper Belt
Visitation of comets from the far reaches of the solar system suggested the existence of t...
published:07 Aug 2015
Finding Proof of the Kuiper Belt
Finding Proof of the Kuiper Belt
published:07 Aug 2015
views:5891
Visitation of comets from the far reaches of the solar system suggested the existence of the Kuiper Belt. However, the relatively small size of the bodies theorized to exist beyond the planets made finding one an unbelievably difficult challenge. Finally, in 1992, astronomers located a slow moving object further out than any observed in our solar system. | http://science.discovery.com/tv-shows/how-the-universe-works/
Catch new episodes of HOW THE UNIVERSE WORKS Tuesdays at 10/9c on Science!
Watch full episodes:
http://bit.ly/HTUWFullEpisodes
Subscribe to Science Channel:
http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=sciencechannel
Check out SCI2 for infinitely awesome science videos. Every day.
http://bit.ly/SCI2YT
Download the TestTube app:
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A man faces charges after accidentally urinating on fellow passengers on a flight in the US. Jeff Rubin, a 27-year-old from Oregon, was on board a flight between Alaska and Portland, according to local reports ... -->. World News in Pictures. ....
Australia’s beleaguered prime minister has been ousted from his position by an internal government challenge, and the party’s former leader has been elected to replace him. Tony Abbott lost a leadership ballot by members of his conservative party following the second challenge to his position this year. The change in leadership comes as the two-year-old conservative coalition government struggles in opinion polls ... Additional reporting....
Image copyright Thinkstock Image caption Our days at the office could be numbered as an increasing amount of jobs are done more efficiently by a machine. If you are sitting at a desk, driving a taxi or carrying a hod, stop for a moment and ask. could a robot or machine do this job better?. The answer, unfortunately for you, is probably - yes ...TAXI DRIVERS ... The UK government is updating the highway code to take account of driverless cars ... ....
Security officials in the US claim they have disrupted a threat to PopeFrancis ahead of his historic visit to the US next week and are “monitoring very closely” the situation. The pope’s upcoming trip to the United States has prompted a massive security operation in the three cities he will visit - New York, Washington and Philadelphia – with a number of major roads shut for the duration of his visit ... He added ... --> ... ....
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- The spigot has opened again, and Pluto pictures are pouring in once more from NASA's New Horizons spacecraft. These newest snapshots reveal an even more diverse landscape than scientists imagined before New Horizons swept past Pluto in July, becoming the first spacecraft to ever visit the distant dwarf planet ... It, too, lies in the so-called KuiperBelt, a frigid twilight zone on the outskirts of our solar system....
The spigot has opened again, and Pluto pictures are pouring in once more from NASA's New Horizons spacecraft. lRelated US & World NewsPluto's historySee all related. 8 ... cComments Got something to say? Start the conversation and be the first to comment. Add a comment. 0 ... The latest images were released Thursday ... It, too, lies in the so-called KuiperBelt, a frigid twilight zone on the outskirts of our solar system ... Associated Press....
It has been nearly a month and a half since the historic flyby of Pluto by the New Horizons spacecraft, and now the mission team has selected its next target for exploration - a small KuiperBelt object (KBO) known as 2014 MU69, which orbits the Sun about a billion miles further than Pluto. This will be the first time such a remote object in the Kuiperbelt has been visited by a spacecraft from Earth....
the inner rocky planets, the Asteroid Belt, the gas giants, and a huge cluster of small icy bodies called the KuiperBelt. Some of those icy chunks in the KuiperBelt are big enough to count as dwarf planets (like Pluto and Eris). Now scientists think something bigger — perhaps four times bigger than Earth — is lurking out there, just beyond the KuiperBelt....
Pluto has definitely been shown to be something more than just a rocky ice ball lingering on the edge of the KuiperBelt... It is headed deeper into the KuiperBelt, a ring of objects around the edge of the solar system ... Beyond the KuiperBelt, New Horizons will eventually enter interstellar space, where only two human made objects, the two Voyager spacecraft that were launched in the 1970s to explore the Outer Planets, have ventured. ....
Oh wow, Pluto. It's good to see you again ... See also. Hello, Pluto. The 9-year journey to a new horizon ... Pluto's icy plains. Image. NASA/JHU-APL/SwRI ... Image ... Meanwhile, the spacecraft itself is now speeding through the KuiperBelt — the group of outer system bodies that Pluto and other dwarf planets are members of ... Scientists recently chose another KuiperBelt object for New Horizons to visit, assuming the mission gets further funding ... ....
It's heading for a 30-kilometre-wide chunk of rock, prosaically labelled 2014 MU69, which sits deep in the KuiperBelt, a cold, dark ring of trillions of icy objects that orbit the sun beyond Neptune... "Frozen rocks like MU69 in the KuiperBelt represent an almost pristine fossil relic of the solar system's earliest days," Swinburne University astrophysicist Alan Duffy explains....
The concept (artist's impression pictured) was developed by Masahiro Ono at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Lab, Pasadena. A tether would replace the fuel used in current spacecrafts.... ....
New Horizons has begun sending back the remaining 95% of data from its July 14 flyby of Pluto, which is expected to take about a year ... This, though, is what mission scientists have been waiting for ... It’s a treasure trove." ... New Horizons itself is continuing to travel out of the Solar System, and last week it was revealed that a new object had been picked for it to visit in the KuiperBelt by 2019. Read this next....
"Hitchhiking a celestial body is not as simple as sticking out your thumb, because it flies at an astronomical speed and it won't stop to pick you up ... "This kind of hitchhiking could be used for multiple targets in the main asteroid belt or the KuiperBelt, even five to 10 in a single mission," Ono said ... Zylon and Kevlar. ... ....
NASA is investigating the possibility of building a hitchhiking spacecraft that could visit five to 10 objects in the asteroid belt or the more distant KuiperBelt in the Solar System. The concept is being studied as part of the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) Program... It is being developed by scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California ... "Instead of a thumb, our idea is to use a harpoon and a tether." ... ....
NASA's goal is to gather as much data as possible about this KuiperBelt object (KBO), called 2014 MU69, while using fuel sparingly ... “The detailed images and other data that New Horizons could obtain from a KBO flyby will revolutionize our understanding of the KuiperBelt and KBOs,”said New Horizons team member John Spencer. ....
The short video stitches together real images captured by New Horizons, showing a dramatically sped-up depiction of the probe's approach and close Pluto flyby, as well as its passage out into the dark depths of the faraway KuiperBelt...Mission team members announced last week that they plan to target a small KuiperBelt object known as 2014 MU69 for a close flyby that would take place in January 2019 ... All rights reserved....