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Published November 2018 | Submitted
Journal Article Open

Astrophysics with New Horizons: Making the Most of a Generational Opportunity

Abstract

The outer solar system provides a unique, quiet vantage point from which to observe the universe around us, where measurements could enable several niche astrophysical science cases that are too difficult to perform near Earth. NASA's New Horizons mission comprises an instrument package that provides imaging capability from ultraviolet (UV) to near-infrared (near-IR) wavelengths with moderate spectral resolution located beyond the orbit of Pluto. A carefully designed survey with New Horizons can optimize the use of expendable propellant and the limited data telemetry bandwidth to allow several measurements, including a detailed understanding of the cosmic extragalactic background light; studies of the local and extragalactic UV background; measurements of the properties of dust and ice in the outer solar system; confirmation and characterization of transiting exoplanets; determinations of the mass of dark objects using gravitational microlensing; and rapid follow-up of transient events. New Horizons is currently in an extended mission designed to focused on Kuiper Belt science that will conclude in 2021. The astrophysics community has a unique, generational opportunity to use this mission for astronomical observation at heliocentric distances beyond 50 au in the next decade. In this paper, we discuss the potential science cases for such an extended mission, and provide an initial assessment of the most important operational requirements and observation strategies it would require. We conclude that New Horizons is capable of transformative science, and that it would make a valuable and unique asset for astrophysical science that is unlikely to be replicated in the near future.

Additional Information

© 2018 The Astronomical Society of the Pacific. Received 2018 February 23; accepted 2018 August 17; published 2018 September 28. We thank the New Horizons science and instrument teams for their decades of dedicated effort designing, building and flying such a complex mission, and in particular H. Weaver for his patience in answering our largely impenetrable queries and his thoughtful input on our work. We would also like to thank B. Crill for his insightful comments that helped improve the study, and our six referees for their incisive thoughts. The New Horizons cruise phase data sets used in this work were obtained from the Planetary Data System (PDS). Support for I.A. was provided by NASA through the Einstein Fellowship Program, grant PF6-170148. A.R.P. was supported by the NASA Planetary Atmospheres program, grant #NNX13AG55G. D.D. acknowledges support provided by NASA through Hubble Fellowship grant HST-HF2-51372.001-A awarded by the Space Telescope Science Institute.

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