Octagonal card with information about New Horizons probe to Pluto

Octagonal card with information about New Horizons probe to Octagonal card with information about New Horizons probe to

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Octagonal card with information about New Horizons probe to
Stephen Hawking Estate/Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Octagonal card with information about New Horizons probe to
Stephen Hawking Estate/Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Octagonal card from about the "New Horizons" space probe built for NASA by the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. It contains information about NASA's Pluto-Kuiper Belt Mission. The card opens to reveal further details.

"New Horizons" was the first space probe to visit Pluto. At the time of its construction and up to its launch in January 2006, Pluto was considered our Solar System's ninth planet. That same year, however, with the probe already on course, Pluto was demoted to "dwarf planet" status in a controversial decision by the International Astronomical Union. This octagonal card with information about the mission was printed while Pluto was still considered a planet.

Among the variety of technical topics outside of Stephen Hawking's scientific expertise that make a presence in his office, the most prominent is spaceflight. Hawking was a very abstract theoretician, but his two most important scientific predictions depended heavily on astronomical observations that could only be conducted outside the Earth's atmosphere. Less than a decade after his dissertation, a NASA x-ray satellite detected the first signal strongly suspected to be a black hole. Through the 1970s and 1980s, rockets and satellites reached into space to measure and image the cosmic microwave background radiation, and continued to improve this map to compare with models of the Big Bang including those proposed by Hawking. Stephen championed space exploration as fundamental to the future of the human species and had public opinions on topics such as the Search for Extraterrestrial Intellicence. Since the 2000s, Stephen also saw the possibility of visiting outer space within his lifetime and was courted by a variety of agencies, entrepreneurs and celebrities advocating for human spaceflight.

Details

Category:
Stephen Hawking Office
Collection:
Stephen Hawking’s Office
Object Number:
2021-561/703
Materials:
paper (fibre product)
Measurements:
overall: 115 mm, .00232 kg
type:
pamphlet
credit:
Accepted in lieu of Inheritance Tax by H M Government from the Estate of Stephen Hawking and allocated to the Science Museum, 2021