Space Topics: New Horizons
New Horizons Mission Facts
Timeline
Launched: January 19, 2006, 2:00pm EST
Jupiter flyby and gravity assist: March 2007
Pluto/Charon Arrival: July - August, 2015
- Observations will begin 5 months prior to the Pluto/Charon encounter.
- Daily studies will begin 4 weeks prior to the encounter.
- Post-encounter studies continue 4 months after the Pluto/Charon
encounter.
- The entire mission dataset will be downloaded 9 months following
the encounter.
Kuiper belt object studies (Extended Mission): 2016-2020
Spacecraft
Diagram of the New Horizons spacecraft
Credit: NASA / JHUAPL |
Spacecraft Size
- Mass: 478 kilograms (1,054 pounds) total; 77 kilograms (170 pounds)
hydrazine fuel; 30 kilograms (66 pounds) science instruments
- Size: 0.7 by 2.1 by 2.7 meters
Spacecraft Communications
- High-gain antenna: 2.1 meters diameter
- Data rate: 38 kilobits per second at Jupiter; 0.6 to 1.2 kilobits
per second at Pluto
- Pluto encounter data will take a total of 9 months to transmit.
Power Requirements
- Power will come from a single radioisotope thermoelectric generator
(RTG) containing 11 kilograms (24 pounds) of plutonium dioxide.
- At the start of the mission, the RTG will provide 240 Watts of energy
at 30 volts. Due to the decay of the plutonium, the power
output will decrease at about 3.5 Watts per year. By July 2015
(the earliest possible Pluto encounter date), the RTG will only
be producing 200 Watts.
- The science instruments collectively draw less than 28 Watts of
power.
Planetary Approaches
Jupiter Gravity Assist (March 2007): 2.27 million kilometers (1.4
million miles) from Jupiter, at 21 kilometers per second (47,000 miles per
hour).
Pluto closest approach (earliest, July 2015): 10,000 kilometers (6,000
miles) from Pluto at about 14,000 kilometers per second (31,000 miles
per hour).
Charon closest approach (at the same time as the Pluto approach): 27,000
kilometers (16,800 miles) from Charon, at about 14,000 kilometers per
second (31,300 miles per hour).
Costs
$650 million. That’s about 20 cents per American,
per year.
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