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Space NASA

NASA Releases First Clear Images of Distant Kuiper Belt Object (engadget.com) 135

NASA's New Horizons team has released the promised first images from its history-making flyby of (486958) 2014 MU69. "The snapshots, captured from as close at 17,000 miles away, show that the 21-mile-long Kuiper Belt object is a 'contract binary' where two spheres slowly collided and fused with each other," reports Engadget. "The two may have linked up '99 percent of the way' to the start of the Solar System, Johns Hopkins University APL said." From the report: Capturing a true representation of 2014 MU69 is difficult, at least with the initial batch of pictures. There's a visible light camera onboard the New Horizons Probe (shown on the left), but the Long-Range Reconnaissance Imager (center) is much sharper. To create an accurate image (on the right), scientists had to produce a composite. Higher-resolution pictures and additional scientific data will keep flowing over the "next weeks and months," the New Horizons team said.
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NASA Releases First Clear Images of Distant Kuiper Belt Object

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  • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Thursday January 03, 2019 @04:58AM (#57897120) Journal

    originally named it Ultima Thule because the term infers that it's "beyond the limits of the known world." In practice, though, it also carries racist connotations.

    Where are the scientists who named the object and what shirts are they wearing?! It's time for another public shaming and apology, right? Good grief...

    • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Thursday January 03, 2019 @08:47AM (#57897644)

      I would have called it Frosty the Snowman, because the object looks like Frosty the Snowman to me... and how cool would that be to have a space object named that?

      • Clearly Frosty is a midget.

      • I would have called it Frosty the Snowman, because the object looks like Frosty the Snowman to me... and how cool would that be to have a space object named that?

        Nope, it's the 21st century. Everything now has to follow the "Frosty McFrostyface" naming convention.

    • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Speaking of public shaming, you are trying to shame imaginary people for an imaginary crime that you fear may possibly happen. Bit of a stretch, no?

      Or just karma whoring with a standard anti-sjw rant?

    • If Trump were science-aware he could have Elly Prizeman design another one of her in-your-face shirts for the presser. Suck on that, PoundMeTooers!

    • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

      Love how they claim there is a controversy, and then has to go on and explain the background of that controversy that no one ever heard of. Seriously, if they had just left it at "beyond the limits of the known world", the author would have done his part to let white supremecists fade into the distant past where they can eventually be buried and forgotten. It's almost like he has never heard of the Streisand Effect.

    • The scientists are obviously working on NASA's Eagle transport and Moonbase Alpha project. Soon, you shall get the PR through Brian Blessed.

    • There is almost no racist overtones at all. "Thule" has been used as a name since antiquity and the obscure fact that some Nazi occultists believed it to be the original Aryan homeland should be nothing more than a minor footnote. "Thule" has meant for ages the furthest land that can be mapped, and "ultima Thule" means it's even further away than that. It's an obscure and geeky name, reflecting the nerddom that is alive and well within NASA with no racist connotations.

  • by kkoo ( 4352157 )
    Is this some sort of asteroid wedding, or business agreement, or something??!!!
  • by BarryHaworth ( 536145 ) on Thursday January 03, 2019 @05:30AM (#57897226) Homepage
    Looks like BB-8 to me.
    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Looks like BB-8 to me.

      after tumbling down a big hill into the mud.

      Actually, the bottom lobe looks somewhat flat in this
      animated composit. [wikipedia.org] Earlier (and blurrier) photos showed a seamingly thinner profile.

    • Ultima Thule is from Space:1999, not Star Wars, and it's obviously ice built around astronauts after their Eagle exploded for no obvious but script-required reason.

      • They started out with 12 Eagles, but lost about 27 of them over the course of the show.

        Am I the only one who immediately thought of Tangerine Dream's "Ultima Thule"?

  • Dirty minds (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 03, 2019 @06:36AM (#57897366)

    From the Engadget article:

    Scientists named originally named it Ultima Thule because the term infers that it's "beyond the limits of the known world." In practice, though, it also carries racist connotations. Nazis and other white supremacists use the term to refer to a mythological homeland for their culture. NASA and the New Horizons team told Newsweek that they'd kept the name because of its more innocent meaning, but it's hard to shake that stigma.

    That's in your mind. Thule and Ultima Thule are names with mythological origin and have been used by explorers for centuries. Ultima doesn't mean "beyond" btw., just last, farthest, and that's how the name is usually used. Ultima Thule is "the edge of the world" or "the most distant land". If your first association is "Nazis use this name", then your mind has become tainted.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      SJWs are actually the most prejudiced and hateful of all.
      They are like Gestapo/DHS officers. Always "finding" something to terrorize you or deport you if they can.

      Just that SJWs were powerless weakling losers before they realized they could simply command the masses, by triggering thought-terminating clichees that create peer pressure and shaming, and then act like they are *the victims*.

      Is "reverse bullying" an already known term?

      • If some person is, I don't give shit what they call themselves, they've nothing to do with justice, social or otherwise.

        Secondly, none of the fuss was stirred up by anyone who actually believed it. It wss a troll, like any other, seeking to cause trouble. If anyone gets killed, well, the author will be that much happier.

        You don't do that if you think you have a point. If you've evidence, you present it (they skip on that, a common trait of trolls) and you remain a dispassionate observer. You report the fact

    • Ditto. I don't get the NorwayNazi connection.

      Oh yeah, there isn't one. Really, people, stop this.

    • It looks like you've had a bit too much to think.
      They said it was racist and so only a racist would dare question it!
      The media has spoken.
      Report to boxcar 451 immediately for "retraining".

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The words or their meanings are not racist. Only a few knuckleheads interpretations, one of which appears to write for Slashdot.

    Quit injecting racism into everything.

  • Looks like the Mandelbrot set in 3D!

    • I've occasionally thought than an alien ship might look like a mandelbulb variation.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandelbulb

  • PC everywhere (Score:5, Insightful)

    by dkone ( 457398 ) on Thursday January 03, 2019 @08:21AM (#57897580)

    And the thing they talk about most in the linked article is how the current name of the object might be offensive to some people. I wonder how much further along we would be as a society if we were more concerned about science and real progress instead of spending so much time on useless shit like 'who might be offended'?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Looking at the photos they should have called it "holy shit balls".

      • There was an asteroid of Devizes ...

      • Holy Shit Balls are symmetrical not lopsided! You are just demonstrating your asymmetricism and asymmetrical world view. I would call you an "insensitive clod" but "clod" is a problematic microaggressive word for the asymmetricarchy.

    • Nothing in the article implied PC. It was all factless trolling, conspuracy theories and malicious troublemaking.

      It wasn't political, never mind correct. It was a deliberate attempt to get NASA engineers attacked or killed for the sport.

    • And there were so many other news articles they could have linked to instead of this lousy one.

  • by Script Cat ( 832717 ) on Thursday January 03, 2019 @08:30AM (#57897604)

    The planet of the first part duly hear by agrees to rest against the planet of the second part and tumble if space until acted upon by a planet of the third part.

  • by Headw1nd ( 829599 ) on Thursday January 03, 2019 @09:57AM (#57897898)
    Here's a better article, that doesn't prattle about Nazis: http://www.astronomy.com/news/... [astronomy.com]
  • The most important finding we could get from this flyby is information about composition of the object. Are these spaceballs a mixture of rock and volatiles, like scoops of Rocky Road ice cream with real rocks? That could explain why when two of them come into slow contact, they squash together and remain in contact, rather than breaking into smaller pieces. This could tell us a lot about planetary formation.

  • It is a "contact binary", not "contract".

    This means two bodies that touch or attach to each other.

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