NASA's New Horizons spacecraft, at its closest approach to Pluto on Tuesday, 14th July, 2015, at 11:49:57 UT. Launched on 19th January, 2006, a journe


NASA's New Horizons spacecraft, at its closest approach to Pluto on Tuesday, 14th July, 2015, at 11:49:57 UT. Launched on 19th January, 2006, a journey of around 6 billion kilometres. This was the first time a spacecraft from Earth visited the dwarf planet and its largest moon Charon since its discovery in 1930 by Clyde Tombaugh (1906-1997). The spacecraft is comparable in size to a grand piano, with a radio antenna dish. Its power is generated by the RTG (radioisotope thermoelectric generator), originally a spare from the Cassini mission, which is the cylindrical device protruding from one apex of the spacecraft's body. Following its 15 months studying Pluto, New Horizons continued out to the Kuiper Belt to study the icy mini-worlds billion kilometres further out than Neptune.


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Keywords: dwarf, dwarfs, exploration, exploring, horizons, ice, icy, mission, nasa, planet, planetary, pluto, probe, science, space, spacecraft, technology, unmanned