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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Ponta Delgada
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Let’s have a ball
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Winter in England s Cotswolds
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Holi festival
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Great Sand Dunes National Park and Preserve
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The Big Blue of the Sierra
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Andermatt village in the Alps, Switzerland
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Wahclella Falls, Oregon
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Río Negro, Amazon basin, Brazil
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Turning darkness into light
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Cosplay strongly encouraged
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Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta
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Everglades National Park marks 90 years
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Citizenship Day and Constitution Day
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World Meerkat Day
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National Roller Coaster Day
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Red squirrel
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Ready for takeoff
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Autumn in Central Park, New York
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To the 155th on the 155th
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Classical music takes center stage
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Wildebeest on the move
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International Day of the Worlds Indigenous Peoples
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Adorable activism
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Giving Tuesday
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Relationship status: It s complicated
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Happy International Astronomy Day!
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South Padre Island, Texas
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Aerial view of the Colorado River Delta in Mexico
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Ad-Deir, Petra, Jordan
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