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NASA Space Science

NASA Spacecraft Confirms Successful Flyby of Distant Solar System Object (theverge.com) 96

NASA received a critical signal from one of its most distant spacecrafts this morning, confirming that the vehicle has just flown by a tiny frozen rock in the outer reaches of the Solar System. From a report: That space probe, named New Horizons, has now made history. Currently located more than 4 billion miles from Earth, the spacecraft has now whizzed past the most distant -- and most primitive -- object that's ever been visited by humanity. "We have a healthy spacecraft," Alice Bowman, the mission operations manager for the New Horizons mission, said after confirming the feat. "We've just accomplished the most distant flyby."

"It's a flyby that's been over a decade in the making, too. Launched in 2006, New Horizons famously passed by Pluto in 2015, becoming the first mission to ever reach the dwarf planet. But ever since that flyby, New Horizons has kept on speeding through the Solar System, in order to meet up with this new object, nicknamed Ultima Thule.

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NASA Spacecraft Confirms Successful Flyby of Distant Solar System Object

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  • Currently located more than 4 billion miles from Earth...

    4 billion miles? I have no idea if that is a small number or a big number!

    4000000000 miles = 6437376000 kilometres.

    OMG that is very, very far!

    • It's a 32-bit number.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Max value of 32 bit integer is only 2,147,483,647 (2.1 billion).
        Max value of 64 bit integer is 9,223,372,036,854,775,807 (9.2 quintillion).

        Hopefully no overflows :-0

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Max value of 32 bit signed integer is only 2,147,483,647 (2.1 billion).
          Max value of 64 bit signed integer is 9,223,372,036,854,775,807 (9.2 quintillion).

          Hopefully no overflows :-0

          FTFY.

          And unsigned 32-bit int is 4294967295; unsigned 64-bit int is 18446744073709551615

        • by arth1 ( 260657 )

          Max value of 32 bit integer is only 2,147,483,647 (2.1 billion).

          One would presume that distances are measured unsigned not signed, which has the range of 0-4294967296.
          But anyhow, if I remember correctly, NASA has historically used BCD notation, which has no logical limit on size or precision, only physical and asserted limits. (And metric, except in press releases.)

    • Re:Miles? (Score:5, Informative)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday January 01, 2019 @12:24PM (#57888658)

      When talking about interplanetary distances, it is usually more intuitive to use AUs (the distance from the sun to the earth).

      4000000000 miles = 43 AU. About 6 light-hours.

      Astronomical Unit [wikipedia.org]

    • Pathetic: there've been miles at least since the Roman Empire. Who 'Anglo-Saxon' over age 30 knows what a Revolutionary 'kilometre' is? Mugs like you have lost the inches in your own dainty thumbs and the feet attached to your Lycra-enhanced legs.
      • FIY I'm Canadian, one of the few countries on the planet that has to deal with both Imperial and Metric units in every aspect of our lives, every day. Basically everything around us that uses a measurement system of any kind has either both or only one.

        • We American scientists and engineers deal with both daily as well. If nothing else from the slower-thinking denizens of Slashdot complaining about English units...
        • by arth1 ( 260657 )

          Basically everything around us that uses a measurement system of any kind has either both or only one.

          This is true for most countries in the world, including the US. Think about it...

      • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

        If you want to include modern miles and Roman miles under the same heading then you're talking relative errors of 9%. That's not exactly suited for engineering. Whereas the error from the original definition of the kilometre (one forty-thousandth of the circumference of the Earth) to the modern one is 0.08%.

        But if you want to ditch the historical perspective and just think about the modern units, a /. reader should be able to convert between miles and kilometres really easily. The conversion factor of 1.609

    • I am sure that your own country's space program, that took scientific observations of Pluto and a Kuiper Belt object, did much better. Which country was that, again?

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by alaskana98 ( 1509139 ) on Tuesday January 01, 2019 @12:29PM (#57888686)
    Pics or it didn't happen... ;)
  • Any more objects that it might be headed towards?
    • Re:What now? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Tuesday January 01, 2019 @01:33PM (#57888890)
      Not this close. The flyby trajectory past Pluto was selected so Pluto's gravity would redirect New Horizons to Ultima Thule. The spacecraft can only alter its trajectory by using its thrusters now. There was another potential target (pending funding from Congress for a mission extension).a bit more than a year from now, but the "encounter" will probably be distant, and mostly be limited to spectrographic comparison with observations from Earth. But you never know. We could get lucky and discover another KBO along the spacecraft's trajectory close enough to use thrusters for another close flyby.
      • But you never know. We could get lucky and discover another KBO along the spacecraft's trajectory close enough to use thrusters for another close flyby.

        If we get really lucky, New Horizons could find another KBO by colliding with it. There's always a chance.

  • In what sense is it primitive? Still running a 32bit 2.4 kernel? Did the probe get showered with spears and arrows as it flew past?

  • Perspective (Score:5, Informative)

    by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Tuesday January 01, 2019 @03:05PM (#57889178) Journal

    The probe is going about 8 miles per second. The object is about 20 miles across. That means it passes the distance of the object's size in less than 3 seconds.

    At closest approach, the object appears roughly the apparent size of our moon from Earth according to one article.

    Thus, if you were sitting on the probe, and put your thumb out and up next to Thule, held it steady and closed one eye, your thumb would cover the distance of it in about 3 seconds.

    It also means the probe only has a minute or two to use its instruments near closest approach. The fly-by speed is almost comparable to watching a high plane fly overhead.

    Being the probe has to swivel its entire body to aim each instrument, that's a lot of dancing in a short time slot. (Some instruments point the same direction to save swiveling.) Further, the exact position wasn't precisely known ahead of time, so many instruments and cameras have to scan an area larger than the target to be sure they cover it.

    Operators sent a "timing correction" to the probe a couple of days ago they said was a 2-second shift, applying updated navigation info using recent probe photos (when Thule was still a spec). I can see why 2 seconds makes a difference at that speed.

  • Cue the "NASA hasn't put a man on Mars so it's useless" wailing.

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