Nasa's New Horizons Finds Space Around Pluto to Be Nearly Dust-Free

Advertisement
By Press Trust of India | Updated: 18 March 2016 18:11 IST
Space environment around Pluto and its moons is almost empty, containing only about six dust particles per cubic mile, according to data collected by a student-built instrument riding on Nasa's New Horizons spacecraft.

The spacecraft found only a handful of dust grains, the building blocks of planets, when it whipped by Pluto at about 49,000 kilometres per hour July last year, scientists said.

"The bottom line is that space is mostly empty," said Fran Bagenal, a professor at University of Colorado Boulder, who leads the New Horizons Particles and Plasma Team.

"Any debris created when Pluto's moons were captured or created during impacts has long since been removed by planetary processes," said Bagenal, a faculty member at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP).

Advertisement

Studying the microscopic dust grains can give researchers clues about how the solar system was formed billions of years ago and how it works today, providing information on planets, moons and comets, said Bagenal.

Advertisement

Launched in 2006, the New Horizons mission was designed to help scientists better understand the icy world at the edge of our solar system, including Pluto and the Kuiper Belt.

A vast region thought to span more than a billion miles beyond Neptune's orbit, the Kuiper Belt is believed to harbour at least 70,000 objects more than 96 kilometres in diameter and contain samples of ancient material created during the solar system's violent formation some 4.5 billion years ago.

Advertisement

The Student Dust Counter (SDC) logged thousands of dust grain hits over the spacecraft's nine year, 3 billion-mile journey to Pluto while most of other six instruments slept, said Professor Mihaly Horanyi from LASP.

"Now we are starting to see a slow but steady increase in the impact rate of larger particles, possibly indicating that we already have entered the inner edge of the Kuiper Belt," said Horanyi, the principal investigator for the SDC.

Advertisement

The dust counter is a thin film resting on a honeycombed aluminium structure the size of a cake pan mounted on the spacecraft's exterior.

A small electronic box functions as the instrument's "brain" to assess each individual dust particle that strikes the detector, allowing the students to infer the mass of each particle.

"Our instrument has been soaring through our solar system's dust disk and gathering data since launch," said Jamey Szalay, a former CU-Boulder student, now postdoctoral researcher at Southwest Research Institute (SwRI).

"It's going to be very exciting to get into the Kuiper Belt and see what we find there," said Szalay.

The research was published in the journal Science.

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Nasa, New Horizons, Pluto, Science
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Redmi Note 15 5G 108 Master Pixel Edition Will Launch in India on This Date
  2. Samsung Could Launch Three Galaxy A-Series Models Early Next Year
  3. Lava Play Max Launched in India With Vapour Chamber Cooling at This Price
  4. Paramount Launches Hostile Bid to Derail Netflix-Warner Bros. Deal
  5. OpenAI's Code Red to Reportedly Continue Till Two More AI Models Are Released
  6. iPhone 16 Becomes the Best-Selling Smartphone in Q3 2025
  7. Google Announces an Extended Repair Program for These Pixel 9 Models
  8. Honor's Robot Phone Could Be One Step Closer to Its Commercial Debut
  9. Nothing Phone 3a Community Edition First Impressions
  10. Nothing Phone 3a Community Edition Launched: Here's What Makes It Special
  1. Samsung Galaxy A36, Galaxy A56 Launch Timeline Tipped; Galaxy A07 5G May Debut in December
  2. Microsoft to Invest $17.5 Billion to Scale India’s AI and Cloud, Joins Google and OpenAI’s Recent Push
  3. Massive Sunspot Complex on the Sun Raises Risk of Strong Solar Storms
  4. Ronkini Bhavan OTT Release: Know Where to Watch This Bengali Web Series Online?
  5. The Great Shamsuddin Family OTT Release Date: When and Where to Watch it Online?
  6. Angels Fallen OTT Release Date: When and Where to Watch it Online?
  7. OpenAI to Reportedly Release GPT-5.2 AI Model This Week, But ‘Code Red’ Will Continue
  8. Top Cooku Dupe Cooku Season 2 Now Streaming Online: Know Where to Watch This Reality Cooking Series
  9. Nothing Phone 3a Community Edition Launched in India With Custom Hardware Design and Custom UI Elements: Price, Features
  10. Google Shares Safety Guardrails for Chrome Browser’s Agentic Capabilities
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.