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New Horizons is a long way away

Discover the New Horizons Pluto probe's journey through the solar system as it nears Uranus' orbit before its close encounter with Pluto.

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I follow the New Horizons Pluto probe Twitter feed, and recently it linked to a graphic showing where the spacecraft is right now:

Man, is that way out in the black. The probe is now closer to the orbit of Uranus than it is to Saturn, though both planets are over a billion kilometers away from New Horizons right now. The solar system is frakkin' BIG (if I may mix my colorful scifi metaphors). If you're still not sure just how roomy things are out there, even at its current speed of 16.5 km/sec (10 miles/sec) -- fast enough to cross the entire United States in five minutes -- New Horizons won't pass the orbit of Uranus until March 18, 2011, more than a year from now. Neptune's orbit isn't until August 24, 2014. One thing to notice: from this point of view, planets revolve around the Sun in a counterclockwise fashion. Given the position of Pluto, you can see the two are heading for a close encounter soon. Well, for a sufficiently broad definition of "soon": July 14, 2015. Space is big.

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