Pluto! (Part three, a slow trickle) (Off-Topic)
A 3 kb/sec trickle, to be precise. That's the rate at which the Deep Space Network site in Madrid is currently receiving data from New Horizons spacecraft, at the time of this post. Not the best bitrate, but then, Madrid is several billion miles from the transmitter. It'll be many months before everything from the Pluto flyby gets back.
Anyway, WHOA. Click on the panorama at the top of the article for a high-res view; 780 miles wide, taken 11,000 miles away and showing mountains 11,000 ft high!
Notable topics in the article:
-There's some vertical streaking in the image which seems to be haze, illuminated by the sun, shadowed by mountains. Pluto may have day-to-day weather changes.
-It looks like there's a glacial cycle similar to Earth's. Except with funky stuff like nitrogen ice instead of water ice.
Get on it, Google!
How long before Google Fiber gets to Pluto?
That is absolutely stunning. The pictures are beautiful, and it leaves me a little dumbstruck to think about what we're actually looking at. I can't even really fully conceptualize how far away that is. It's pretty mind blowing. Makes me feel small . . . in a good way. An amazing way.
There's so much to yet to discover, and it adds a little perspective to the day to day grind of life.
Weather. We can see weather. On Pluto. O.O
- No text -