NASA’s New Horizons Mission Update from the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab (APL)
NASA,APL,Applied Physics Laboratory (Spacecraft Manufacturer)
Weekly pre-flyby updates aired June 23 on NASA TV provides an overview of the New Horizons mission, the spacecraft and its suite of instruments being prepared for a July 14 flyby, and a summary of Pluto science to date.
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NASA’s New Horizons Mission Update from the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab (APL)
21 Comments
21 Comments
Why is no one watching this?!
.gabe seems like a fairy. Fire hi rehire normal human
so funny watching these in close caption and when the technicians were talking with each other over radio and using scientific jargon the close caption only said this (unintelligible) hahahahaha god i love computers
Plutophiles sounds way too much like pedophiles ahaha — probably a term that should not be used again 😂 thanks for the video !
I’m SOOO excited!!!!
Wow ! So close to seeing some pictures rather than CGI
7800 miles? Is NASA still using old units?
Yuhuu TNH enjoy your visit to Pluto n family. N say hi from earthians. Hope you haven’t forgotten your extra sweater as its cold out there. ^^
WHAT IF;for those who believe in the big bang theory ‚that the big bang was caused by arriving here from a black hole like a bullet and exploding on arrival.…MAYBE ‚.LIFE DID NOT BEGIN HERE.
How does this only have ~3,000 views?
I enjoyed the video, and thanks for uploading it. May I request a lower volume on the background music please? I found it hard to hear Bill McKinnon (I wrote this comment right after his segment).
Thanks again!
that guy’s smile is freaking me out a little
Wow! so excited and cant wait to see the mysterious and enigmatic Pluto up close!!!
calm down fellow„, are you sniffing something? don’t treat people like they are 12 year olds…
let’s hope they don’t bump into anything.…some of these people still use miles and body parts to do calculations… like in the middle ages ..weird..
That wobble from the interaction with charon looks like it creates some serious tidal forces could pluto have a subsurface ocean?
Is that guy the Cheshire Cat?
Why just a fly by? Why not place a satelite in orbit from the beginning?
Hal Weaver here pronounces Pluto’s moon Charon as “Share-un”. But in a recent NASA documentary I just heard the narrator always pronounce it as “Care-un”. So is it that both pronunciations are correct? I just wanted to share on my care on this issue.
awesome
Plutophile. :flushed: