Pluto was first spotted on this day in 1930 by Clyde Tombaugh, a 23-year-old astronomer at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona. Because it"s so far away—about 40 times as far from the sun as Earth is—scientists knew relatively little about Pluto until the New Horizons spacecraft reached it in 2015. In a flyby study, the craft spent more than five months gathering detailed information about Pluto and its moons. What did they find out? There’s a heart-shaped glacier, blue skies, spinning moons, mountains as high as the Rockies, and it snows—but the snow is red.
Too awesome to be a planet
Today in History
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Heavens Gate Cave, Tianmen Mountain National Park, China
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Manatee Awareness Month
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Anza-Borrego Desert State Park, California
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Yi Peng Festival in Chiang Mai, Thailand
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Wildebeest on the move
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An island hopper s paradise
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Black-naped monarch
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Elephant Rock, Al-Ula, Saudi Arabia
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Hanging out on a limb
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Happy New Year!
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Happy Thanksgiving!
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Nighttime view over the Gulf Coast
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Boxing Day
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And they’re off!
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Heri es-Swani in Meknes, Morocco
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Oh, happy day!
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Manatee Awareness Month
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World-class art comes to Arkansas
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Surf s always up in Paia
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World Giraffe Day
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Spring blooms in the Netherlands
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What does the fox dream?
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

