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SYFY WIRE Bad Astronomy

New Horizons Gets a First Glimpse of Pluto’s Moon Charon

By Phil Plait
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File this under âOK, this is pretty coolâ: The New Horizons spacecraft, currently just under 900 million kilometers (550 million miles) from Pluto, took its first picture of Charon, Plutoâs largest moon!

In the picture, Charon is to the upper left of Pluto. In the right-hand frame, the circles mark the predicted positions of the two objects given the positions of New Horizons, the two worlds, and the pointing of the camera. Not bad.

New Horizons was launched in January 2006, and will zip past Pluto and its retinue of moons in July 2015. It still has a long way to go; 900 million kilometers isnât exactly an afternoon stroll. Itâs well past the orbit of Uranus now, and even though itâs moving at a fantastic 15 kilometers per second (32,000 miles per hour, fast enough to cross the entire Earth in 15 minutes) it still has two years to go.

The outer solar system is big.

Thatâs why Charon wasnât even discovered until 1978, and even then it was just a bump on the side of a grainy, fuzzy photo of Pluto. It wasnât long after that time that digital detectors made their debut, allowing telescopes to see far fainter objects. Now, using Hubble, five moons are known to exist around Pluto: Charon, Hydra, Nix, Styx, and Kerberos. More might be out there; perhaps New Horizons will discover them.

Pluto is tiny, only about 2300 km (1500 miles) across, smaller than Earthâs moon. Charon is about 1200 km (720 miles) across. From 900 million kilometers, the two are difficult to separate, but New Horizonsâ high resolution camera can do it. The image above is actually a stack of six separate images, which allows fainter objects to be seen. The total exposure time was only 0.6 seconds.

This image shows that New Horizons is on the job and performing well. The most important thing to me is that the predictions of the locations of Pluto and Charon were dead on; this is a fly-by mission, and the spacecraft will scream through the Pluto system at high speed. It will need to be pointed very accurately if weâre to get high-resolution images.

Pluto has been an enigma for a long timeâmy whole life, and more. Itâs hard to believe that in two short years, weâll have images of it good enough to be used for your computer desktop. And we donât know what weâll find! Itâs been speculated based on some observations that Charon might have plumes of water erupting from the surface, for example. What a thing that would be to see up close!

Still, patience. Judging from this first preliminary image, weâll know a lot more soon enough.

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