Our 3-billion-mile journey to Pluto reaches historic #PlutoFly! Details & the high-res image: http://t.co/qX7KpXIUUQ pic.twitter.com/LDjXLtPdly
— NASA (@NASA) July 14, 2015
RELEASED: Enhanced color image shows #Pluto's compositional diversity during #PlutoFlyby. http://t.co/8468Jp50Tm pic.twitter.com/sab64kB4p5
— NASA New Horizons (@NASANewHorizons) July 14, 2015
Don't do something because it's easy. Do something because you want to. Give yourself that challenge. --Alice Bowman, Mission Ops Mgr
— Charles Bergquist (@cbquist) July 15, 2015
Happy members of the @NewHorizons2015 team #PlutoFlyby pic.twitter.com/LCmmr5kDtA
— Julie Leibach (@julieleibach) July 15, 2015
Congrats to the entire @NASANewHorizons team! pic.twitter.com/PsNlbchK6c
— Science Friday (@scifri) July 15, 2015
.@NASANewHorizons has been making history in more ways than one. http://t.co/WRstBDVVKQ #PlutoFlyby pic.twitter.com/meU2ViAFji
— Science Friday (@scifri) July 15, 2015
.@NASANewHorizons is okay! They are in lock with the spacecraft! #PlutoFlyby pic.twitter.com/NkEsCTv4Ju
— Science Friday (@scifri) July 15, 2015
I recall Viking on Mars, Voyager pix for Jupiter, Saturn, and Neptune. This completes my journey, too. https://t.co/UrZe6jaTvw
— Ira Flatow (@iraflatow) July 14, 2015
How we saw Pluto in 1996, and today #PlutoFlyby @NASANewHorizons pic.twitter.com/snLuhMCd0u
— Science Friday (@scifri) July 14, 2015
#PlutoFlyby has been almost a decade in the making. http://t.co/WRstBDVVKQ pic.twitter.com/GGoqXFCcWO
— Science Friday (@scifri) July 15, 2015
Pluto may be small, but it's still pretty big. For comparison, here's Manhattan in the surface image. #PlutoFlyby pic.twitter.com/HhGfTpyM51
— Science Friday (@scifri) July 15, 2015
Discussion