[ES] NASA's New Horizons probe just woke up from hibernation 6 billion miles away beyond Pluto. What's it doing out there?

[ES]  NASA's New Horizons probe just woke up from hibernation 6 billion miles away beyond Pluto. What's it doing out there?

Revelación Extraterrestre: NASA's New Horizons probe just woke up from hibernation 6 billion miles away beyond Pluto. What's it doing out there?

Este artículo fue recopilado automáticamente de nuestra red de monitoreo. Nuestros investigadores están revisando actualmente las implicaciones de este evento.

Puntos Clave:

  • La fuente original informó detalles sobre anomalías OVNI.
  • Eventos cósmicos que apuntan a un aumento de las frecuencias planetarias y actualizaciones galácticas.

Copy link Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Pinterest Flipboard Email Share this article 22 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter NASA's New Horizons probe has woken up in good health nearly 6 billion miles away beyond Pluto after spending nearly a year in hibernation.Traveling such vast distances between our solar system's most remote objects means New Horizons often cruises for months at a time with little to do other than passively collect data. During these periods, the probe goes into a hibernation mode in which its instruments still collect data, but most other systems power down.New Horizons entered just such a hibernation period last August, and has now woken up in "good health", according to a NASA statement. The spacecraft is 5.9 billion miles (9.5 billion kilometers) from Earth, so far away that it takes around 9 hours for its radio signals to reach us. Now that it's awake, New Horizons will begin transmitting the data it has collected over the last 321 days and letting its controllers on the ground know how its systems are faring in the cold, dark reaches of deep space.So far, the probe appears to be in perfect health. "Every status report through this hibernation period was 'green,' meaning all was well aboard New Horizons each and every week," said Alice Bowman, the New Horizons mission operations manager at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in the NASA statement.New Horizons is th...

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