. 24/7 Space News .
New Horizons Mission Team Plans Jupiter Encounter

Most mission planners find Jupiter a popular way point when traveling to the Outer Planets and beyond
  • 800X600     1024X768
  • 640x480     1280X1024 Desktop version of Cassini's best Jupiter image

  • San Antonio - Nov 24, 2003
    The main goal of NASA's New Horizons mission may be to explore Pluto-Charon and the Kuiper belt beginning in 2015, but first the mission plans to fly by the solar system's largest planet, Jupiter, during February-March 2007. The Jupiter flyby would be used by New Horizons to provide a gravitational assist that shaves years off the trip time to Pluto-Charon and the Kuiper belt.

    During the flyby, plans call for New Horizons to use its instrument payload, consisting of cameras, spectrometers, radiometers, and space plasma and dust sensors, to make a variety of scientific observations.

    Toward that end, the New Horizons team has formally kicked off its planning of the Jupiter flyby science observations. Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) and the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) lead the mission. Major partners include Ball Aerospace, Lockheed-Martin, Boeing, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and the California Institute of Technology Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

    "Every spacecraft must check out its instruments and pointing capabilities in flight prior to reaching its target," says mission project scientist Dr. Hal Weaver of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. "By virtue of the gravity assist maneuver at Jupiter, New Horizons has a unique opportunity to do its check out on a very worthy and exciting scientific target."

    "New Horizons presents NASA's next opportunity to study the complex and fascinating Jupiter system," says Dr. Alan Stern, principal investigator of the New Horizons mission and director of the SwRI Space Studies Department. "To accomplish its gravity-assist maneuver on the way to Pluto-Charon, our spacecraft will venture at least three times closer to Jupiter than the Cassini spacecraft did in late 2000 when it used Jupiter for a gravity assist on the way to Saturn.

    "Astronomically speaking, we will fly just outside of the edge of Jupiter's large, planet-sized Galilean moon, Callisto." From its closer range, New Horizons will perform a number of Jupiter system studies not possible from Cassini's greater flyby distance.

    Science planning is going forward to ready the mission for its planned 2006 launch, at the same time that required environmental and safety reviews are also being done. Through the summer of 2004, the New Horizons science team will prioritize its Jupiter science activities from objectives provided by team members as well as interested scientists from around the world.

    To accomplish this objective, Stern has appointed mission co-investigator and imaging team lead Dr. Jeff Moore of the NASA Ames Research Center to lead the New Horizons Jupiter Encounter Sequencing Team (JEST).

    "New Horizons will be the next mission to Jupiter, and it is carrying a sophisticated instrument complement," says Moore. "We intend to cull and then schedule the most critical needs for scientific observations of Jupiter, its satellites, its magnetosphere and its rings.

    "Following that," Moore continued, "the mission team will design and implement a five-month-long sequence of observations of the Jupiter system to be made from late 2006 through early 2007 as the spacecraft approaches and then recedes from Jupiter."

    "Exploring the Jupiter system is a coveted scientific bonus for New Horizons," adds Weaver. "It also provides us with a valuable opportunity to check out the instrument payload and many of the flyby procedures we will later use at Pluto-Charon."

    New Horizons is proceeding toward a January 2006 launch, with a planned arrival at Pluto and its moon, Charon, in the summer of 2015. The 465-kilogram (1,025-pound) spacecraft will characterize the global geology and geomorphology of Pluto and Charon, map the surface compositions and temperatures of these worlds, and study Pluto's atmospheric composition and structure. It will then visit one or more of the icy, primordial bodies in the Kuiper belt where it will make similar investigations.

    In July 2002, the National Research Council's Decadal Survey for Planetary Science ranked the reconnaissance of Pluto-Charon and the Kuiper belt as its highest priority for a new start mission in planetary science, citing the fundamental scientific importance of these bodies to advancing understanding of our solar system.

    Related Links
    New Horizons
    MESSENGER
    The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
    Southwest Research Institute
    SpaceDaily
    Search SpaceDaily
    Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



    Memory Foam Mattress Review
    Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
    XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


    Pluto Mission May Be Early Victim Of Growing Budget Crisis
    Sacramento - Aug 21, 2003
    Startlingly, the saga of NASA's "New Horizons" Pluto flyby probe - which, earlier this year, finally received official approval and funding from NASA, the White House and Congress, and seemed assured of launch in 2006 - has undergone yet another perilous twist, of a wholly unexpected sort.







  • Cassini Captures Jupiter In Close-Up Portrait
  • Space Rights Proposal To Be Launched At International Lunar Conference
  • Skylab 30 Years Later
  • National 'SPACE' Exhibit Tour to Blast Off in Seattle

  • Status of Japan's Mars Explorer "Nozomi"
  • Worldwide Sundials
  • Rovers On Course For Mars
  • Delta-Like Fan on Mars Suggests Ancient Rivers Were Persistent

  • Russia Launches Two Small Yamal GEO Birds
  • LaBarge Awarded Atlas 5 Wire Harness Contract
  • ESA And Rosaviakosmos Sign Up For Two Foton Flights
  • Japanese SERVIS-1 Satellite Launched by Eurockot

  • Ball Aerospace's QuikSCAT to Fly Fifth Year
  • Over Land, Sea And Air, Users Give MERIS High Marks
  • ResourceSat-1 Beams Excellent Pictures
  • Remote Sensing Conference to Expose Opportunities

  • New Horizons Mission Team Plans Jupiter Encounter
  • Pluto Mission May Be Early Victim Of Growing Budget Crisis
  • Pluto Mission May Be Early Victim Of Growing Budget Crisis
  • Pluto Mission May Be Early Victim Of Growing Budget Crisis

  • Three-Ton Science Experiment To Cruise South Pole Skies For Cosmic Rays
  • NASA Selects SwRI Proposal To Study Interstellar Boundary
  • New View Of Milky Way In Gamma Rays
  • World's Largest Air Shower Array Searching For Super-High-Energy Cosmic Rays

  • Buyers Look To The Moon As Alternative To "Costly" Real Estate On Earth
  • Spiralling To The Moon Via The Van Allen Radiation Belts
  • Lunar Polar Ice Not Found With Arecibo Radar
  • Russia To Render Aid To India In Implementing Lunar Programme

  • Storm Hawk Offers Weather and Navigation In One Handset
  • Boeing To Launch Three more GPS Birds
  • FAA Tests New Satellite Capabilities For Air Traffic Management
  • ATK Receives Order For JDAM For Precision Sensors

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement