Earth-Based Support for the New Horizons Kuiper Extended Mission. Richard Binzel Alan Stern John Spencer 2016 DPS Meeting, Pasadena October18 th 2016

Similar documents
New Horizons Update. SBAG Meeting Jan. 12 Tucson. Will Grundy. New Horizons Composition Science Theme Team Lead

New Horizons Beyond Pluto: The Ultima Thule Flyby

New Horizons Mission Update

New Horizons Pluto/KBO Mission Status Report for SBAG. Hal Weaver JHU Applied Physics Laboratory

Alan Stern/New Horizons Mission PI Southwest Research Institute 13 September 2017

New Horizons Pluto/KBO Mission. Hal Weaver The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

Giant Planet / Kuiper Belt Flyby

PI: Hal Levison. DPI: Cathy Olkin (SwRI) SwRI Manager: John Andrews. PM: Mike Donnelly (GSFC] DPM: John Loiacono [GSFC] S/C Provider: LM

NEW HORIZONS 2. New Horizons: A Journey to New Frontiers

Solar System Observations with Spitzer

The search for Planet X Lowell Observatory, Flagstaff, Arizona. Overview. Andy Lubenow

NASA Planetary Science Programs

Planetary Science Update. David Schurr Deputy Director Planetary Science July 23, 2014

New Horizons Pluto/KBO Mission Status Report for SBAG. Hal Weaver NH Project Scientist The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

New Horizons Pluto/KBO Mission Status Report for SBAG. Hal Weaver NH Project Scientist The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

New Horizons Pluto Kuiper Belt mission: design and simulation of the Pluto Charon encounter

SBAG GOALS Origin of the Solar System Theme

Limits on Pluto Rings from the June Stellar Occultation. Henry Throop, R. G. French, K. Shoemaker, C. R. Ruhland, L. A. Young, C. B.

The Exploration of Pluto By New Horizons Alan Stern/SwRI

Transneptunian objects. Minor bodies in the outer Solar System. Transneptunian objects

Pluto, the Kuiper Belt, and Trans- Neptunian Objects

Transneptunian Binaries and Collision Families: Probes of our Local Dust Disk

GAIA: SOLAR SYSTEM ASTROMETRY IN DR2

Juno Status and Earth Flyby Plans. C. J. Hansen

Team Name: Team Number: Score: SOLAR SYSTEM SCIENCE OLYMPIAD ROCKFORD INVITATIONAL 12 JANUARY 2019

The Planet Pluto. & Kuiper Belt. The Search for PLANET X Pluto Discovered. Note how Pluto Moved in 6 days. Pluto (Hades): King of the Underworld

Kurt Lindstrom: Overview of New Horizons. Hal Weaver: Overview of the Science. Glen Fountain: Overview of the Mission

SOLAR SYSTEM 2019 SAMPLE EXAM

ASTEROIDS, COMETS, AND TRANS-NEPTUNIAN OBJECTS:

NASA s Planetary Science Program Status

Time-series Photometry of Earth Flyby Asteroid 2012 DA14

OPTICAL NAVIGATION PREPARATIONS FOR THE NEW HORIZONS KUIPER-BELT EXTENDED MISSION

Observational Cosmology Journal Club May 14, 2018; Ryohei Nakatani

Using Spitzer to Observe the Solar System

HST Observations of Planetary Atmospheres

Overview. Hubble Pluto Satellite Search Team reporting the discovery to the New Horizons Science Team on November 2, 2005 at the Kennedy Space Center

Spitzer Space Telescope Calibration Strategy: The Use of Asteroids

Physical Characterization Studies of Near- Earth Object Spacecraft Mission Targets Drs. Eileen V. Ryan and William H. Ryan

Synergies between E-ELT and space instrumentation for extrasolar planet science

arxiv: v1 [astro-ph.ep] 25 Jun 2018

AST111, Lecture 1b. Measurements of bodies in the solar system (overview continued) Orbital elements

Other Solar Systems. Week 15 (Chapter 13): Other Planetary Systems

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

There are 4 x stars in the Galaxy

The 14-Nov-2003 Titan Occultation. Eliot F. Young Angela Zalucha

Susan D. Benecchi 18 April 2013

Searching for Other Worlds: The Methods

HD Transits HST/STIS First Transiting Exo-Planet. Exoplanet Discovery Methods. Paper Due Tue, Feb 23. (4) Transits. Transits.

Revision Submitted to Icarus 11 December Planetary Science Institute, 1700 East Fort Lowell, Suite 106, Tucson, AZ 85719;

The Gravitational Microlensing Planet Search Technique from Space

The Main Point. Planetary Ring Systems

NEW HORIZONS PRE-FLYBY MATERIALS

Conceptual Themes for the 2017 Sagan Summer Workshop

Modeling the Orbits of the Outer Planets

Exploring and Understanding the Primitive Bodies of the Solar System: Progress Report from the Primitive Bodies Panel of the Decadal Survey

The New Horizons Geometry Visualizer: Planning the Encounter with Pluto

Report to Planetary Science Decadal Survey Primitive Bodies Panel. Perspectives from the Previous PBP Experience,

HST Aurora Observations: Transient Water Vapor at Europa s South Pole

CONTENTS. vii. in this web service Cambridge University Press. Preface Acknowledgements. xiii xvi

How occultations improve asteroid shape models

A collective effort of many people active in the CU4 of the GAIA DPAC

EPOXI/EPOCh Observations of Transiting Extrasolar Planets

Gaia News:Counting down to launch A. Vallenari. INAF, Padova Astronomical Observatory on behalf of DPACE

Searching for Other Worlds

Earth, Uranus, Neptune & Pluto. 14a. Uranus & Neptune. The Discovery of Uranus. Uranus Data: Numbers. Uranus Data (Table 14-1)

TNOs are Cool: A Survey of the Transneptunian Region. (39 members, 19 institutes, 9 countries)

PLATO. revealing the interior of planets and stars completing the age of planet discovery for Earth-sized planets constraining planet formation

A Survey of the Trans-Neptunian Region

Feasible Mission Designs for Solar Probe Plus to Launch in 2015, 2016, 2017, or November 19, 2008

Pan-Planets. A Search for Transiting Planets Around Cool stars. J. Koppenhoefer, Th. Henning and the Pan-PlanetS Team

Pluton, les glaces du bout Pluton révélee par la mission New Horizons et la simulation numérique

Who was here? How can you tell? This is called indirect evidence!

Pluto and Charon. New Horizons

Planetary Science from a balloon-based Observatory. January 25-26, 2012 NASA Glenn Research Center

Pluto s Seasons: New Predictions for New Horizons

Uranus & Neptune, The Ice Giants

OSIRIS-REX OVERVIEW PRESENTATION TO THE PLANETARY SCIENCE SUBCOMMITTEE

Lecture 38. The Jovian Planets; Kuiper Belt. Tides; Roche Limit; Rings Jupiter System Saturn, Uranus, Neptune rings Plutinos and KBO's

Pueo-Nui Workshop Solar System Observations

The Earth-Moon-Sun System. I. Lunar Rotation and Revolution II. Phases of the Moon III. Lunar Eclipses IV. Solar Eclipses

Planets: Name Distance from Sun Satellites Year Day Mercury 0.4AU yr 60 days Venus yr 243 days* Earth 1 1 yr 1 day Mars 1.

Solar Systems Near and Far - ALMA View

The New Horizons Kuiper Belt Extended Mission

Science Scenario Modeling

The expected Gaia revolution in asteroid science: Photometry and Spectroscopy

The Transneptunian Automated Occultation Survey (TAOS II) Matthew Lehner ASIAA

New Horizons Mission To Pluto Fran Bagenal University of Colorado

Earth, Uranus, Neptune & Pluto

Review III. ASTR 371, Fall Jovian Planets and Rings (Lecture Notes 9; Chap 12, 14)

Name. F = ma P 2 = a 3 (M + m) P 2 = a 3. maxt = 2900 K m

Astronomy. Uranus Neptune & Remote Worlds

VLBA Astrometry of Planetary Orbiters

Rachel Street. K2/Campaign 9: Microlensing

Asteroid Families. Asteroid Families. A. Cellino, A. Dell Oro CD07, Alicante. INAF --Osservatorio Astronomico di Torino

Presentation to SBAG January 2016

Astronomical Research at the Center for Adaptive Optics. Sandra M. Faber, CfAO SACNAS Conference October 4, 2003

Debris Disks: A Brief Observational History Thomas Oberst April 19, 2006 A671

Rotation period determination for asteroid 9021 Fagus

Astronomy November, 2016 Introduction to Astronomy: The Solar System. Mid-term Exam 3. Practice Version. Name (written legibly):

Comet Science Goals II

Transcription:

Earth-Based Support for the New Horizons Kuiper Extended Mission Richard Binzel Alan Stern John Spencer 2016 DPS Meeting, Pasadena October18 th 2016

Agenda Introduction to New Horizons Kuiper Belt Extended Mission (KEM) - Alan Stern Overview of KEM Observations John Spencer Supporting Groundbased Priorities Rick Binzel Occultation Opportunities Amanda Zangari Discussion - All 2 Please complete the signup sheet!

2014 MU 69 Orbit is typical for cold classical KBO (prob. kernel) Thus likely to be red, relatively low albedo Unlikely to resemble small Pluto satellites in origin or composition However we know little about CCKBOs in this size range Opposition in 2016: July 5 th HST discovery images 3 Note: JPL Horizons gives opposition V magnitude incorrectly as 25.4

MU69 Size Currently unknown: depends on albedo Typical KBO albedos are in the range 0.04 0.15, corresponding to diameters of 40 21 km Below break-in-slope of KBO size-frequency distribution Primordial body smaller than preferred accretion size? Product of collisional fragmentation? Chance to determine size via stellar occultations in summer 2017 Very challenging, due to narrowness of occultation shadow Cold Classicals Hot KBOs Jupiter Trojans Fraser et al. (2014) 2014 MU 69

MU69 Rotation Period Period currently unknown Typical KBO rotation periods are in the range 4 24 hours Lightcurve amplitude < ~factor of two HST program (Susan Benecchi, PI) will attempt determination of the rotation period and lightcurve amplitude with 24 orbits of HST time in summer 2017 Depending on the result, it may be possible or desirable to use fuel on approach to MU69 to arrive near lightcurve maximum, to maximize illuminated pixels

MU69 Color Recently constrained using HST (Susan Benecchi, PI) Uncertainties are large, but consistent with red color of other cold classical KBOs 1.4 1.2 Approximate Diameter (km) 854 340 135 54 Red Diamond = Classical Gray Square = All other Classes Black Circle = New Horizons KBOs 2013 LU35 F606W-F814W 1.0 0.8 2011JW31 2012HE85 2011HF103 2011JY31 2011HK103 2011HZ102 2014OS393 2014PN70 2014MU69 0.6 Pluto Color Solar Color 0.4 20 22 24 26 F606W

Nominal Strawman MU69 Close Encounter Sequence Strawman 3000 km c/a distance (subject to change) Visible imaging, many phase angles, up to 25 m/pixel Near-IR compositional maps ~1.0 km/pixel Color imaging, ~0.5 km/pixel FUV/EUV observations to search for outgassing REX disk-integrated day and night thermal emission Distance Perpendicular to Trajectory, km -10,000 7 0 CA01_Alice K- 3000 s Sun Direction Direction of motion CA02_LEISA CA02_LORRI CA03_LEISA CA03_Alice K- 2000 s CA04_REX CA04_Alice CA05_MVIC COL CA05_LORRI CA06_LEISA CA06_LORRI K- 1000 s CA07_LORRI MU69-40,000-30,000-20,000-10,000 0 10,000 20,000 Distance Along Trajectory, km CA08_MVIC PAN CA08_LORRI K+ 0 s CA09_MVIC PAN CA09_LORRI CA10_REX CA10_Alice K+ 1000 s CA11_LORRI CA12_Alice

Currently uses a 10,000 km close approach, +/- 12,000 km position uncertainty May change with further analysis C/A = 10000 km, TOF err = 840 s 4 Backup Strawman MU69 Close Encounter Sequence MU69 0 0 0 CA01_Alice CA02_LEISA CA02_LORRI CA03_LEISA CA03_Alice CA04_REX CA04_Alice CA05_MVIC CA05_LORRI COL Sun Direction CA06_LEISA CA06_LORRI CA07_LORRI CA08_MVIC CA08_LORRI PAN CA09_MVIC CA09_LORRI PAN CA10_REX CA10_Alice CA11_LORRI CA12_Alice 0 K- 3000 s K- 2000 s K- 1000 s K+ 0 s K+ 1000 s 0,000-30,000-20,000-10,000 Backup sequence and trajectory covers multiple contingencies: Hazard detection on approach Discovery of multiple bodies best studied at greater range Larger than expected navigational uncertainties Can decide to implement as late as K-16 days Distance Perpendicular to Trajectory, km 0-10,000 CA01_Alice K- 3000 s CA02_LEISA CA02_LORRI Sun Direction CA03_LEISA CA03_Alice K- 2000 s CA04_REX CA04_Alice CA05_MVIC COL CA05_LORRI Nominal strawman plan, to same scale CA06_LEISA CA06_LORRI K- 1000 s CA07_LORRI MU69-40,000-30,000-20,000-10,000 0 10,000 20,000 Distance Along Trajectory, km CA08_MVIC PAN CA08_LORRI K+ 0 s CA09_MVIC PAN CA09_LORRI CA10_REX CA10_Alice K+ 1000 s CA11_LORRI CA12_Alice 8

Best Imaging in Strawman Sequence: Phobos-Based Simulation Assumes diameter of 32 km Includes expected SNR 9

Distant KBO Science Goals Distant (0.1 several AU) flybys of ~20 KBOs from ranges and geometries unobtainable from Earth Imaging with resolution better than HST in many cases, to search for satellites or unexpected phenomena (rings??) Lightcurves as a function of phase/aspect angle to constrain shapes and pole orientations Phase curves to constrain surface textures Phase curves can be compared to MU69 as a test of how typical MU69 is Including high phase angle searches for forward-scattering rings Possible vis/uv stellar occultations/appulses to search for rings, outgassing Possible mutual events of binary KBOs (none identified so far) 10

Distant KBO/Centaur Science Blue bars = planned 3-axis periods 24 objects in current plan Science Goals Multiple phase angles for phase coefficients 11 High phase angle photometry to search for forward-scattering rings Lightcurves from multiple viewpoints for shapes, rotation periods, pole positions Deep (4x4 binned) and hi-res (1x1, unbinned, up to 75 km/pixel) imaging for satellite and ring searches No color or NIR observations (all are too faint for MVIC color or LEISA) UV or visible occultations, if suitable opportunities are found Mutual events of binary systems, if suitable opportunities are found

Distant KBO/Centaur Science 4x4 LORRI limiting magnitude ~20 1x1 LORRI limiting magnitude ~16, with large numbers of coadds 12

Distant KBO Example Results So Far Plutino (15810) 1994 JR1, observed Nov 2015 and April 2016 First high phase observations of a KBO (up to 58 degrees) Phase curve fit indicates a rough surface Lightcurve gives first measurement of the rotation period (5.5 hours) Astrometry constraints orbital evolution 13

What We Need Astrometry of 2014 MU 69 and distant targets for orbit refinement and targeting Includes refinement of astrometric nets using Gaia and possibly additional starfield observations Earth-based occultations of MU69 (or other targets) Discovery and orbit refinement of binary KBOs to aid in search for NH mutual event opportunities Discovery of additional KBOs close enough or bright enough for useful NH observations (most useful in 2017) 14

What We Need Earth-based rotational lightcurves and periods For comparison with NH lightcurves for shape / pole orientation modeling and rotational correction of phase curves For bright KBOs with well-determined lightcurves, would like to know rotational phase at time of NH observations Rotation periods are valuable, especially in 2017, for design of most efficient spacecraft observations Absolute photometry for phase curves Colors (New Horizons observations of distant KBOs will be panchromatic only) For intrinsic value, and color corrections for phase curves Observations of other small KBOs to provide context for 2014 MU 69 and other targets 15

Challenges Most objects needing observations are fainter than R = 25 2014 MU 69 is R ~ 26.8 (don t believe Horizons!) Exception: Rotational lightcurves of bright KBOs Crowded star backgrounds for most objects But improving with time 16

http://www.boulder.swri.edu/nh-support-obs/ Ready for an Update 4

Target List and Priorities 5

Known Programs Proposal Lead Facility Obs Type Description Buie HST MU69 Astrometry Approved long-term Benecchi HST MU69 Photometry Rotation period and lightcurve amplitude Porter Keck MU69 Astrometry / Not awarded photometry Kavelaars Gemini South MU69 Astrometry Weathered out Tanga Gaia Reference frame Astrometry Release expected 14 September Gurwell / Butler ALMA considered MU69 detection Estimate 25 days and not practicable. E. Young SOFIA MU69 Occultations Proposal submitted? Gurwell / Butler ALMA Pluto CO+HCN Pluto Thermal Map Submitted, pending Submitted, pending Benecchi / Lisse Kepler K2 (Campaign 7) Pluto high precision photometry >3000 measurements delivered! 6

MU69 Stellar Occulta/ons

Three Occulta/ons, Three Campaigns SOFIA Campaign Portable Campaign contact Eliot Young efy@boulder.swri.edu Debris and satellite campaign contact Amanda Zangari azangari@boulder.swri.edu Need GAIA update to MU69 and proper mo/ons. Occulta/ons are on Earth. Looking for collaborators proposals at SOAR, (all) IRTF (July 10)

Three%MU69%occulta/ons% These paths subject to update from ongoing astrometry measurements and reduc6ons. For predic6on status, contact: azangari@boulder.swri.edu NH - 08194514G by 14MU69 2017/06/03 03:15:59 RA: 19 03 34.4927 DEC: -20 34 39.342 Ephemeris corrections: 0.0000s 0.000as Asteroid V: 27.29 Computed R: 26.89 Star R: 15.30 Drop in R: 1.000 Diam: 75.0 = 0.002as Max Duration: 3.7s Q: 82.1 Solar elongation: 147.6 Lunar elongation: 103.3 Illuminated: 66.3% Sun altitude at -12.0 shown dotted Ticks from: 03:11:00 to 03:21:00 every 1 min NH - 07544526G by 14MU69 2017/07/17 03:53:21 RA: 19 00 08.2918 DEC: -20 39 37.968 Ephemeris corrections: 0.0000s 0.000as Asteroid V: 27.22 Computed R: 26.82 Star R: 13.58 Drop in R: 1.000 Diam: 75.0 = 0.002as Max Duration: 3.1s Q: 81.8 Solar elongation: 169.3 Lunar elongation: 105.1 Illuminated: 46.2% Sun altitude at -12.0 shown dotted Ticks from: 03:49:30 to 03:57:30 every 30 sec Paths shown are the status as of 2016 October 18

Discussion