The images were taken from just under 50 million miles (77 million
kilometers) away, using the Long-Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) on
New Horizons. Because New Horizons was approximately 20 million miles
closer to Pluto in mid-May than in mid-April, the new images contain
about twice as many pixels on the object as images made in mid-April.
A
technique called image deconvolution sharpens the raw, unprocessed
pictures beamed back to Earth. In the April images, New Horizons
scientists determined that Pluto has broad surface markings – some
bright, some dark – including a bright area at one pole that may be a
polar cap. The newer imagery released here shows finer details.
Deconvolution can occasionally produce spurious details, so the finest
details in these images will need confirmation from images to be made
from closer range in coming weeks.
"As New Horizons closes in on
Pluto, it's transforming from a point of light to a planetary object of
intense interest," said NASA's Director of Planetary Science Jim Green.
"We're in for an exciting ride for the next seven weeks."
“These
new images show us that Pluto’s differing faces are each distinct;
likely hinting at what may be very complex surface geology or variations
in surface composition from place to place,” added New Horizons
Principal Investigator Alan Stern of the Southwest Research Institute in
Boulder, Colorado. “These images also continue to support the
hypothesis that Pluto has a polar cap whose extent varies with
longitude; we’ll be able to make a definitive determination of the polar
bright region’s iciness when we get compositional spectroscopy of that
region in July.”
The images New Horizons returns will
dramatically improve in coming weeks as the spacecraft speeds closer to
its July 14 encounter with the Pluto system, covering about 750,000
miles per day.
“By late June the image resolution will be four
times better than the images made May 8-12, and by the time of closest
approach, we expect to obtain images with more than 5,000 times the
current resolution,” said Hal Weaver, the mission’s project scientist at
the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in
Laurel, Maryland.
Following a January 2006 launch, New Horizons
is currently about 2.95 billion miles from home; the spacecraft is
healthy and all systems are operating normally.
APL designed, built,
and operates the New Horizons spacecraft, and manages the mission for
NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. SwRI leads the science team, payload
operations and encounter science planning. New Horizons is part of the
New Frontiers Program managed by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Alabama.
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