Tuesday, 1 January 2019

News Alert: Correction: NASA receives signal from New Horizons spacecraft passing the most distant object humans have ever explored

At the dawn of 2019, the New Horizons spacecraft flew past a space rock called Ultima Thule, four billion miles from Earth. At the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, where the mission originated, space scientists celebrated the flyby with the nerdiest New Year's party in the solar system. Mission control just received the first signals from the encounter, confirming that it was a success. An earlier version of this alert incorrectly said that NASA had received images from New Horizons. The alert also misspelled the name of the spacecraft.
 
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News Alert Jan 1, 11:03 AM
 
 
Correction: NASA receives signal from New Horizons spacecraft passing the most distant object humans have ever explored

At the dawn of 2019, the New Horizons spacecraft flew past a space rock called Ultima Thule, four billion miles from Earth. At the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, where the mission originated, space scientists celebrated the flyby with the nerdiest New Year's party in the solar system.

Mission control just received the first signals from the encounter, confirming that it was a success.

An earlier version of this alert incorrectly said that NASA had received images from New Horizons. The alert also misspelled the name of the spacecraft.

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