k New HorizonsImage. New Horizons spacecraft in Kuiper Belt, artwork. New Horizons launched from Earth on 19 January 2006 and will take 9 years to reach the Kuiper Belt, arriving mid2015. It will first study Pluto, one of the largest of the Kuiper Belt objects KBOs, and then other KBOs over the next few years. The Kuiper Belt consists of numerous small rocky, icy objects at the outer edge of the solar system, over 6 billion kilometres from the Sun upper left. It has never before been visited by a spacecraft from Earth. The spacecraft will use cameras and scientific equipment to gather data, sending it back to Earth with a large 2.1 metre dish antenna yellow. Jupiter orange and Neptune blue are dots at upper right. The Suns zodaical dust plane is also seen. Editorial Stock Photo - Afloimages
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New Horizons Image. New Horizons spacecraft in Kuiper Belt, artwork. New Horizons launched from Earth on 19 January 2006 and will take 9 years to reach the Kuiper Belt, arriving mid 2015. It will first study Pluto, one of the largest of the Kuiper Belt objects  KBOs , and then other KBOs over the next few years. The Kuiper Belt consists of numerous small rocky, icy objects at the outer edge of the solar system, over 6 billion kilometres from the Sun  upper left . It has never before been visited by a spacecraft from Earth. The spacecraft will use cameras and scientific equipment to gather data, sending it back to Earth with a large  2.1  metre  dish antenna  yellow . Jupiter  orange  and Neptune  blue  are dots at upper right. The Sun s zodaical dust plane is also seen.
ED

New Horizons Image.

New Horizons spacecraft in Kuiper Belt, artwork. New Horizons launched from Earth on 19 January 2006 and will take 9 years to reach the Kuiper Belt, arriving mid-2015. It will first study Pluto, one of the largest of the Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs), and then other KBOs over the next few years. The Kuiper Belt consists of numerous small rocky, icy objects at the outer edge of the solar system, over 6 billion kilometres from the Sun (upper left). It has never before been visited by a spacecraft from Earth. The spacecraft will use cameras and scientific equipment to gather data, sending it back to Earth with a large (2.1- metre) dish antenna (yellow). Jupiter (orange) and Neptune (blue) are dots at upper right. The Sun's zodaical dust plane is also seen.

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ID
10618957

Collection

License type
Editorial

Photographer

Creation date
19-11-2010

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