02.28.07
NASA
Spacecraft Gets Boost From Jupiter for Pluto Encounter
LAUREL, Md. - NASA's New Horizons spacecraft successfully completed
a flyby of Jupiter early this morning, using the massive planet's
gravity to pick up speed for its 3-billion mile voyage to Pluto and
the unexplored Kuiper Belt region beyond.
"
We're on our way to Pluto," said New Horizons Mission Operations
Manager Alice Bowman of Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics
Laboratory (APL), Laurel, Md. "The swingby was a success; the
spacecraft is on course and performed just as we expected."
New Horizons came within 1.4 million miles of Jupiter at 12:43 a.m.
EST, placing the spacecraft on target to reach the Pluto system in
July 2015. During closest approach, the spacecraft could not communicate
with Earth, but gathered science data on the giant planet, its moons
and atmosphere.
At 11:55 a.m. EST mission operators at APL established contact through
NASA's Deep Space Network and confirmed New Horizons' health and
status.
The fastest spacecraft ever launched, New Horizons is gaining nearly
9,000 mph from Jupiter's gravity - accelerating to more than 52,000
mph. The spacecraft has covered approximately 500 million miles since
its launch in January 2006 and reached Jupiter faster than seven
previous spacecraft to visit the solar system's largest planet. New
Horizons raced through a target just 500 miles across, the equivalent
of a skeet shooter in Washington hitting a target in Baltimore on
the first try.
New Horizons has been running through an intense six-month long systems
check that will include more than 700 science observations of the
Jupiter system by the end of June. More than half of those observations
are taking place this week, including scans of Jupiter's turbulent
atmosphere, measurements of its magnetic cocoon, surveys of its delicate
rings, maps of the composition and topography of the large moons
Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto, and a detailed look at volcanic
activity on Io.
"
We designed the entire Jupiter encounter to be a tough test for the
mission team and our spacecraft, and we're passing the test," says
New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern from the Southwest
Research Institute in Boulder, Colo. "We're not only learning
what we can expect from the spacecraft when we visit Pluto in eight
years, we’re already getting some stunning science results
at Jupiter - and there's more to come."
While much of the close-in science data will be sent back to Earth
during the coming weeks, the team also downloaded a sampling of images
to verify New Horizons' performance.
The outbound leg of New Horizons' journey includes the first-ever
trip down the long "tail" of Jupiter's magnetosphere, a
wide stream of charged particles that extends more than 100 million
miles beyond the planet. Amateur backyard telescopes, the giant Keck
telescope in Hawaii, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and Chandra X-Ray
Observatory and other ground and space-based telescopes are turning
to Jupiter as New Horizons flies by, ready to provide global context
to the close-up data New Horizons gathers.
New Horizons is the first mission in NASA's New Frontiers Program
of medium-class spacecraft exploration projects. The Applied Physics
Laboratory, Laurel, Md., manages the mission for NASA's Science Mission
Directorate, Washington. The mission team also includes NASA's Goddard
Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.; NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, Calif.; the U.S. Department of Energy, Washington; Southwest
Research Institute, Boulder, Colo.; and several corporations and
university partners.