July 26
A Valentine from
Pluto's Tombaugh Regio
“There’s a heart on
Pluto!”
When I checked in for
an online update and live broadcasts about the New Horizons approach to Pluto,
the first voice I heard was a familiar one.
It was Annette
Tombaugh. She and her brother Alden were there at ground zero in Laurel, Md.,
at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, which designed, built
and operates the New Horizons spacecraft and manages the mission for NASA’s
Science Mission Directorate.
The Las
Cruces siblings had also been in Cape
Canaveral on Jan. 19, 2006, when the probe was launched with the
ashes of their dad, Pluto’s discoverer Clyde Tombaugh, on board. Their mom,
Clyde’s wife Patricia Edson Tombaugh, had been there for the Florida launch, too, and told me then, she
hoped to be around to see the closest flyby in July 2015.
She almost made it. She
died at age 99 in 2012.
But I suspect many of
us had the feeling the space pioneer couple were both there, in robust spirit,
when the first photos of our favorite planet (dwarf or no) came streaming in.
And the bold heart that
showed up, and was soon christened “Tombaugh Regio,” seemed like the kind of
cosmic valentine, or high five, the Tombaughs would send us.
Equally heartwarming
was to see so many on our home planet get so excited about space exploration
again.
There was a lot of
cheering — at Super Bowl caliber volume — when the little piano-sized probe
navigated some final challenges after a more than 3 billion mile voyage and
managed to do just what it was supposed to do: Focus on its closest approach to
Pluto and its five moons, and then start reporting back with the first of some
amazing discoveries that will be streaming in for many months to come.
A week later, Clyde’s
kids and their spouses and some of their kids, grandkids and other family members,
were back in Las Cruces.
Alden Tombaugh praised
the “level of science and technology” and talked about “the unexpected
excitement when they found the heart shape. We were constantly barraged by
reporters from all kinds of different media. It was absolutely wonderful to see
that excitement about the New Horizons’ adventures. We were there for the
launch and it was great to be there for the grand finale.”
His grandkids, he
reports, “were amazed by everything going on.”
“Just being there with
all the people that are so fantastic in so many fields was thrilling. Every one
of the team is very dedicated. And you have to have a good sense of humor to go
through what the science team has gone through,” Annette said.
“It was fantastic. It
just couldn’t have been better. It was so exciting and so much fun. It’s just
so joyous when everything works out so well. The biggest moment was after the flyby closest
approach: the moment when [the probe] called back and made it through the
system and started to download. We weren’t sure until it called home that it
had made it,” she said.
“Between Tuesday and
Thursday (July 14 to 16), I did something like 35 to 40 interviews with people
from all over the world. There are a lot of surprises: the high nitrogen
atmosphere, the geological activity, Pluto and Charon (Pluto’s biggest moon)
acting as a double planet. We’ll be getting so much information about Pluto and
the Kuiper Belt Objects. I was astounded at all the people who came long
distances, on their own time and paid their own way to be there. And I’ve kept
in touch with what we call the Pluto children, who were born the day of the
launch. Of course, my heart is with the children,” said Annette, a life-long
educator who is carrying on a family tradition. Her parents both lectured until
their final years and were particularly touched by how much Pluto is adored by
kids.
New Horizons has
demonstrated that “Science is not dull. Science is fun,” said Annette.
She’s been cool, calm,
objective and keenly interested in the scientific revelations of the mission.
But she’s also inclined
to accept and share a valentine message.
“My dad loved astronomy
and he put a heart on Pluto. Pluto says, ‘I love you no matter what you call
me,’” Annette said.
S. Derrickson Moore may be
reached at dmoore@lcsun-news.com, @derricksonmoore on Twitter and Tout, or call
575-541-5450.
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