WASHINGTON — The New Horizons spacecraft did what it was meant to do. It explored the unexplored dwarf planet Pluto.

So, now what?

A year from now, New Horizons will join four other unmanned spacecraft speeding out of our solar system: Pioneer 10, Pioneer 11, Voyager 1 and Voyager 2.

“The Pioneers (are) now dead,” said Randii Wessen, a spokesman for NASA and an astronautical engineer who works on future mission concepts at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology. Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11 explored Jupiter and Saturn in the 1970s and stopped sending information back to NASA in 2003 and 1995, respectively.

“These things have heliocentric escape velocity,” Wessen said, meaning they have the ability to leave the sun’s gravitational pull. “These were given enough speed that the pull of the sun is going to slow them up but it won’t stop them from their departure from the solar system. So they’re just going to glide, dead, leaving our star forever.”

Voyagers 1 and 2, which also were launched in the 1970s, are still transmitting data back to NASA. According to Wessen, NASA gets 16 hours of information a day from the Voyagers, but they’re losing fuel and power.

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“We’re slowly turning off things to reduce the electrical demand so the power we do have is used for the critical systems,” Wessen said. “But what are you going to run out of first? We’re saying 2020-2025 is when we’re going to lose them.”

Eventually, both of the Voyagers and New Horizons will “die” and stop sending information back to NASA. But even then, like the Pioneers, they’ll serve as ambassadors of Earth.

“They’re ambassadors in the sense that they’re our eyes and ears going places where we as a species can’t go,” Wessen said. “So they represent us.”

Each of the spacecraft contains some kind of message from Earth.

The two Pioneer missions feature a gold anodized plaque that has drawings of nude humans and some symbols meant to represent the mission.

The Voyager missions contain golden records full of sounds, greetings and pictures that are meant to symbolize mankind.

New Horizons has a number of objects, including an American flag, the state quarters of Maryland and Florida, the ashes of Pluto discoverer Clyde Tombaugh and a CD with more than 400,000 names, including former TV host Bill Nye “The Science Guy” and Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla Motors and SpaceX.

The objects on New Horizons are varied, with no clear message. Jon Lomberg, a science artist and the designer of the golden records that went out on the Voyagers, hopes to change that with a crowd-sourced project that NASA would send to the computers on New Horizons. It’s still in the fundraising phase, but there isn’t much of a rush. It will be at least a year before NASA can send the information.

“This is the first generation that has been able to send objects outside of the solar system,” Lomberg said. “That’s as big a step as the first animal crawling out of the water onto the land.”


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