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Mission to Pluto

The First Visit to an Ice Dwarf and the Kuiper Belt

ebook
6 of 6 copies available
6 of 6 copies available
In July of 2015 a robotic spacecraft reached Pluto after a nine-and-half-year journey. New Horizons is the first spacecraft mission to Pluto and revealed its five moons as never before seen. Images from the mission show a reddish surface covered in ice-water mountains, moving glaciers, and hints of possible ice volcanoes and an underground ocean. Pluto is geologically alive and changing!
This addition to the Scientists in the Field series goes where no person or spacecraft has ever gone before. Follow along with the team of scientists as they build New Horizons, fly it across the solar system, and make new discoveries about a world three billion miles away.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 12, 2016
      In this entry in the Scientists in the Field series, Carson and Uhlman trace the efforts of NASA scientist Alan Stern and his team as they sent the spacecraft New Horizons to Pluto. The narrative opens in July 2015, just as the first images of the dwarf planet were unveiled. Carson then backtracks to explore the path that led to this feat, including Clyde Tombaugh’s 1930 discovery of Pluto, campaigns to mount a Pluto mission, and how the New Horizons project took shape. Carson maintains a thrilling sense of immediacy, bolstered by Uhlman’s on-the-scene photos—and, of course, New Horizon’s dramatic images of Pluto and its fellow residents of the Kuiper belt. Ages 10–12.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from November 15, 2016
      A team effort sends a space probe to the edge of our solar system.When New Horizons flew by Pluto and sent home data and images in 2015, it was the culmination of a 26-year campaign (and a nine-year journey) and the first-ever exploration of that far-distant ice dwarf planet. Science writer and self-described "space geek" Carson and her photographer husband introduce their comprehensive description of this collaborative mission by showing the jubilant scene at the mission operations center as the spacecraft revealed its first close-up images. Then, chapter by chapter, they explain its purpose; the makeup of the craft and the instruments it carries; the journey across the solar system to Pluto, which was demoted from planet to dwarf planet during the 9 years but turned out to have 4 more moons than previously thought; some major discoveries from this first encounter; and the continuation of the mission into the Kuiper belt of small planets. Sidebars and longer sections called "Mission Briefs" provide additional information. The author's enthusiasm shines through her clear, conversational narrative, and she quotes from personal interviews as well as press conferences and releases, extending the book's intimacy. Uhlman's well-captioned photographs of the team members (mostly white and male) are nicely mixed with photos from NASA and elsewhere and occasional digital illustrations. A worthy companion to Catherine Thimmesh's Team Moon (2006) with similar appeal. (glossary, web resources, sources, index) (Nonfiction. 10-14)

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      December 1, 2016
      Grades 5-8 This thrillingly up-to-date entry in the acclaimed Scientists in the Field series traces the history and progress of the exploration of Pluto, with special attention paid to the recent and still ongoing flyby mission, New Horizons. Bolstered by excited interviews with some of the scientists and engineers involved in the New Horizons mission, Carson covers the inception of the project, the construction of the probe, the physics gymnastics involved in collecting data once it finally arrived, and some of the groundbreaking discoveries garnered from those findings. Carson's descriptions of the concepts are crystal clear and nicely supported by the many color photographs, plenty of which are part of the trove of photos taken by the probe, and diagrams charting, among other things, the probe's path, Pluto's geological makeup, and the solar system far beyond the usual eight planets. This enthusiastic, accessible look at both cutting-edge scientific discovery and the dynamic work behind the scenes will be an easy sell to space-mad kids and a valuable addition to any school library.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      March 1, 2017
      In 2015, after nine years in transit from Earth, the New Horizons spacecraft successfully flew past the dwarf planet Pluto. The data sent back -- including amazingly crisp images of never-before-seen surface details -- has opened a new window onto the science of the outer solar system. Carson's description of the mission, crafted from firsthand accounts and images provided by members of the scientific team, takes readers through the decades-long process of getting a multi-million-dollar NASA mission funded, built, and launched -- at times in spite of politics, budget cuts, and waxing and waning public interest in space. The technical details are fascinating, since the engineering constraints for getting a light, fast, cheap machine all the way to Pluto were daunting. Equally astonishing are the scientific advances that occurred during this period: four new moons of Pluto were discovered (two in 2005 and two in 2012), and it was reclassified as a dwarf planet in 2006. Carson augments this account with facts about Pluto and the solar system, the schematics of the spacecraft, and the history of Pluto's discovery by an amateur astronomer. The emotional moment when the first New Horizons data arrived -- which Carson and Uhlman witnessed -- is captured in the photographs included throughout the book. This data provided new information about Pluto's composition, topography, age, and even possible recent geologic activity. The mission isn't over yet: readers can check out the appended websites to follow New Horizons into the Kuiper Beltand perhaps beyond. danielle j. ford

      (Copyright 2017 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:6.3
  • Lexile® Measure:940
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:4-6

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