Pluto Probe on it's way

(bolding mine)

“All these worlds are yours, except Europa. Attempt no landing there. Use them together. Use them in peace.”

This.

Entirely this.

If sending a space probe billions of miles into the future and actually getting pictures back years later doesn’t impress you then you need to seriously question your own existence. Seriouslyl

Kudos to you, Hypno-Toad. You said you would do it and you did. 100% awesome.

I know what you mean. I watched the Curiosity landing live (or as live as Einstein permitted) and I was just sort of happy for about a week afterwards.

Emily L is now my Hopeless Internet Crush.

Future? Can you explain please.

Nine years ago we (they) sent a probe into the future.

Cthulhu is on Pluto!

Oh, of course. I’m not sure why I was having problems parsing it. Too early in the morning.

Sounds like you would be interested in The Kirkhill Pillar Project in West Lothian, Scotland.

There’s a disc six feet across (1.8m) representing the Sun. And then each planet represented by a piece of an artwork, making up a scale model. So Earth is approximately 200m from the Sun, and is 1.6cm across.

Pluto is 7.5 Km from the Sun and is 3.8mm across. There’s a metal plaque saying “I could be.” and the full stop is the scale model of Pluto.

To anyone who grew up seeing the odd orrery in a museum, it’s quite mind-boggling.

What, Terra has oceans? Who knew!

I thought terra was firma than that.

And they are so inaccessible that we’ve only been to the deepest parts [del]once[/del] twice.

The Bad Astronomer follows up on this.

Amazing what you can deduce from size, mass, distance, likely chemicals and such.

The scale I like has the Sun as a two-foot beach ball on the goal-line at my local football club, the Earth as a dried pea most of the way to the other end of the field, and Alpha Centauri in Australia.

Thought I posted this earlier. Video of the “systems nominal” sequence (in case you want to relive it)

Brian

FYI, an online solar system calendar. Plug in the prefered diameter for the sun and get the planet sizes and orbit radius of each planet, plus sizes and distances of other stellar objects.

Been riveted to the Internet news on this over the last few months. I can’t believe it’s been 9 years already. The iPhone was a year away from hitting the market when NH launched. Crazy.

Anyway, so… It’s a butterscotch color (not what I imagined as a kid). What does that coloration, primarily, come from? It’s mostly frozen nitrogen, methane and carbon monoxide.

It’s amazing how young so many of them are.

If you don’t have the time to go to Scotland, this site gives a good sense of the distances involved. Hint: you need to do a lot of scrolling. :slight_smile: