New Horizons captures incredible backlit photo of Pluto's crescent
- The latest photo
relayed from NASA's New Horizons spacecraft has landed and it is a stunner.
Taken right after the probe hurtled past Pluto in July, the back lit image was
snapped from a distance of 11,000 mi (18,000 km) and highlights the hazy layers
in the dwarf planet's tenuous atmosphere.
- Last month, NASA
released a breath-taking set of images snapped by New Horizon's wide-angle Multi-spectral Visible
Imaging Camera (MVIC). The series showed various geological features in
impressive detail, including 1,353 m (11,000 ft) tall mountain ranges and the
vast icy expanses of the plain known as Sputnik Planum.
- The latest image, which
comes courtesy of processing work by the New Horizons team, offers a more complete picture.
Taken as New Horizon peered back at Pluto 15 minutes after its historic
flyby with the sun providing dramatic
backlighting. In it we see the smooth Sputnik Planum illuminated on the right
hand side, with the mountain range known informally as Norgay Montes sitting
above and what NASA believes to be glaciers appearing underneath.
- New Horizons has
continued on its path beyond Pluto toward the Kuiper Belt, though it continues to return data showing
the dwarf planet and its surroundings in new light. Last week it sent back
images of its smallest moon Kerberos, completing a collection of family portrait of Pluto's
satellites.
Keywords-NASA's New Horizons spacecraft ,New Horizon's wide-angle Multi-spectral Visible Imaging Camera (MVIC),Dramatic backlighting
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