Fran Bagenal is professor of astrophysical and planetary
sciences at the University of Colorado, Boulder and is a co-investigator on the New Horizons mission.
Her main area of expertise is the study of charged particles trapped in planetary magnetic fields.
She is interested in finding out if the solar wind interaction with Pluto's escaping atmosphere
acts like a comet.
|
![]() |
Space exploration is always fun and exciting - venturing out into the
vastness, getting glimpses of new worlds, rockets, robots, etc. The New
Horizons mission to Pluto is the little spacecraft on the biggest
rocket that goes to the farthest planet. For the price of a Starbucks
coffee per taxpayer we have a 9-year mission that will show us what
this cold, icy chunk, its companion Charon and two recently-discovered
tiny moons all look like. Moreover, Pluto's geological features, frosty
surfaces and escaping atmosphere tell us about a key episode in the
formation of the solar system when the gas giant planets were embroiled
in a massive snowball fight.
The New Horizons website is fascinating and full of information. Check out especially the SCIENCE section, most of which Fran Bagenal wrote.
Click the image:
|