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NASA Space

NASA's New Horizons To Arrive At Pluto With Clyde Tombaugh's Ashes 108

hypnosec writes NASA's New Horizons is bringing with it the ashes of Clyde Tombaugh – its discoverer – as it cruises towards the now dwarf-planet or 'plutoid'. The probe will be close enough on January 15 to start observing Pluto. Clyde Tombaugh discovered the ice and rock-laden Pluto in 1930 and one of his final requests was that his ashes be sent into space. Tombaugh died on January 17, 1997. Fulfilling that wish NASA has fitted the upper deck of New Horizons probe with a small container containing Tombaugh's ashes alongside a total of 7 scientific instruments. "Interned herein are remains of American Clyde W. Tombaugh, discoverer of Pluto and the solar system's 'third zone'", reads the inscription on the container.
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NASA's New Horizons To Arrive At Pluto With Clyde Tombaugh's Ashes

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  • Makes me wonder if any other astronomers or other scientists to discover celestial objects will have their ashes sent in homage...
    • Re:It's a first... (Score:5, Informative)

      by mbone ( 558574 ) on Sunday January 11, 2015 @01:30PM (#48787613)

      Lunar Prospector [wikipedia.org] carried Gene Shoemaker's ashes to the Moon, and was "deliberately targeted to impact in a permanently shadowed area of the Shoemaker crater near the lunar south pole." Now, they did that for science reasons, but it was still a very fitting end (they could have chosen another crater, of course).

      • I did not know that -- it's very sweet; good for them.

        Now, I do have an off-topic question: When God finally arrives and brings back everyone from the dead:

        a) Does that also include cremations? (Probably so -- just add water.) Dismemberment? (Super Glue.)
        b) Will He do it more than once? I can just see Gene waking up in the shadow of the moon, and then immediately expiring because of the non-existent atmosphere and cold. So is this a one-time thing, or does God hit Ctrl-Alt-Del repeatedly until it
        • I saw a BBC show once about how the English treat their dead. They were running out of room in the Victorian times, and started cremations. The clincher was WW1, when the troops were being blown to smithereens with artillery and there wasn't enough of them to be resurrected, whether you're the deity or not.
    • Makes me wonder if any other astronomers or other scientists to discover celestial objects will have their ashes sent in homage...

      It's a romantic notion, but strikes me as not really in the spirit of science. If I knew someone was going to explore this awesome thing I discovered, I would much rather have them use every bit of available weight to further that discovery.

      • A few ounces of ash isn't going to be replaced by a useful science instrument. If they sent up people's entire remains it'd be a different story.

        • by clovis ( 4684 )

          A few ounces of ash isn't going to be replaced by a useful science instrument. If they sent up people's entire remains it'd be a different story.

          A whole corpse? That would be awesome, especially when some alien culture opens up the probe and realizes what it is.

          Alien Corporal realizes what he's looking at: WTF! WTF! It's some dead guy!
          Alien Sarge: A corpse? Is this some kind of joke? Why would they do that? Find the Captain and tell him.
          Alien Captain: I bet it's a threat. They're saying this is what they'll do to us.
          Alien Captain: We need to hit them first and hit them hard.
          Alien Captain: Unlock the weapons cabinets, and make sure every man has his

      • ...and when the probe sent in my name crashes into said object (deliberately, or due to decaying orbit), I'd prefer that the object in question was contaminated by it as little as possible such that any future missions could look at it in it's original form.

    • And would they have sent his ashes if Pluto had been demoted already?
      • They would have added a note saying 'oh, and by the way, sorry about demoting your "planet" '.

        Or 'Have fun touring your "planet", wink wink'.

      • by S.O.B. ( 136083 )

        Regardless of how it is classified he still discovered it. So I'm guessing yes, they still would have sent his ashes.

      • Re:And (Score:5, Informative)

        by crunchygranola ( 1954152 ) on Sunday January 11, 2015 @06:04PM (#48789269)

        And would they have sent his ashes if Pluto had been demoted already?

        You are confused. Pluto was not "demoted". It in its old (inaccurate) classification it was the smallest and last planet to be discovered, a Johnny-Come-Lately.

        What Tombaugh really did was discover the first of a whole new class of objects - the Kuiper Belt Objects that extend far past the planets. And Pluto is its king - it is the largest and most prominent of all the KBOs (Eris, is queen, having the exact same diameter as far as we can tell, but is more distant and dimmer).

        Discovering a whole new class of objects beats discovering yet another planet.

        • I mean since they had to reclassify Pluto given the new evidence. Lets see, the Sun is still classified as a yellow dwarf even though it's actually white(as viewed from space) and is bigger than 90% of all stars in the universe.(Since most stars are actually red dwarves and the Sun is much bigger than them.)
        • by ihtoit ( 3393327 )

          not quite... Eris is slightly larger (by 30-40km) and 27% more massive than Pluto. (citation: W. M. Keck Observatory)

  • by VMaN ( 164134 ) on Sunday January 11, 2015 @01:24PM (#48787569) Homepage

    Just a small portion of his ashes. Postage to the Kupier belt is still pretty expensive.

  • Just a flyby... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mbone ( 558574 ) on Sunday January 11, 2015 @01:25PM (#48787575)

    Clyde Tombaugh will really be interred in interstellar space, as New Horizons has no means of scattering his ashes on Pluto.

    • by Waffle Iron ( 339739 ) on Sunday January 11, 2015 @01:45PM (#48787731)

      ... unless they've made a slight math error in their navigation computations.

      • by mbone ( 558574 )

        It would be more than slight :)

        On the other hand, if there are any unknown tiny moons of Pluto, he might get interred on one of those.

        • Of the error were using imperial units rather than metric ...

          Seriously, though, I understand they are considering / did consider getting within 3,000km of Pluto. If that course correction is made a million km out, 3,000km is just 0.3% error.

        • This does seem like a small but nontrivial risk. Aside from Charon there are four rocks we can see from here -- who knows else lurks? I should think that the mission team will be taking a long hard squint at every image they can slurp down along the way looking for new dangers, so that the trajectory can be adjusted in time.
    • So now he gets to watch the whole thing stuffed between a couple of robotic instruments...

      "it just dawned on me how weird this movie is"

  • Clyde Tombaugh discovered NASA? Outstanding, I've been wondering where they disappeared for a long time!

    • Watch interstellar. Its future however.

    • he clearly discovered New Horizon by that first sentence, work on your reading comprehension. Hopefully whomever built it is not offended by NASA's comandeering of it for a Pluto mission

      • I read it that Clyde Tombaugh discovered Clyde Tombaugh!
      • by Donwulff ( 27374 )

        I tried to find a hard and fast rule on what the possessive pronoun "its" would refer to in that case, but alas, no luck... Glad I don't have to learn english! According to Wikipedia though, "In most cases, a pronoun follows its antecedent, and in many cases, the coreferential reading is impossible if the pronoun precedes its antecedent."
        In the olden days there was a convention of referring to ships as "she", I would contend partly because of the unclarity of the antecedents, because on the open seas there

        • Or Tombaugh was a genderless non-human entity before assuming maleness as a disembodied spirit making a request over his pile of ashes. yes, I think we have it right now

      • he clearly discovered New Horizon by that first sentence, work on your reading comprehension. Hopefully whomever built it is not offended by NASA's comandeering of it for a Pluto mission

        Apparently he discovered tortured grammar.

        We, of course, already know where to look ...

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Yeah that's going to confuse the hell out of some alien archeologist 20,000 years from now.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Same thing with Interstellar. Can't we get over the petty nationalism and explore space as Humans?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      It's more concise than "funding for NASA was provided by the taxpayers of the United States of America".

  • by mbone ( 558574 ) on Sunday January 11, 2015 @02:48PM (#48788131)

    New Horizons will start imaging (and optical navigation) this month, but it won't be better than Hubble [jhuapl.edu] until mid-May. That's when the fun will really start.

  • by SpankiMonki ( 3493987 ) on Sunday January 11, 2015 @05:06PM (#48788959)
    for the Plutoidite remake of "The Gods Must be Crazy".
  • For a spring ejector to allow them to fling his ashes int a trajectory that would allow them to impact on the planet.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      NH is whizzing by Pluto pretty quickly. I doubt a small mechanical device would be enough to fling a small canister to crash land on Pluto.

      Unless, perhaps the flinging is done several weeks before the Pluto encounter such that the canister splits off from NH's trajectory and simply smashes into Pluto face on. But its velocity would have to be spot-on because Pluto's gravity isn't going to make the target much bigger at the probe's encounter speed (which would be similar to the canister's). Adjustment propel

  • There's also a CD with the names of everyone who submitted their name on NASA's website shortly before the launch. My daughter's name is on it.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    He is the Farthest Man From Home

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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