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
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Val Gardena, South Tyrol, Dolomites, Italy
-
Seattle Central Library, Seattle, Washington
-
Turning darkness into light
-
Spring equinox
-
Chilling out in the Arctic
-
Waimea Canyon and Waipoo Falls, Kauai, Hawaii
-
Groundhog Day arrives—beyond a shadow of a doubt
-
Oloupena Falls, island of Molokai, Hawaii
-
Birds and bees, and why they re so important
-
Palace of Westminster, London, England
-
A leafy seadragon in the waters off Wool Bay, Australia
-
Salzburg, Austria
-
Chocolate Hills
-
World Otter Day
-
Andean cocks-of-the-rock, Ecuador
-
Cherry blossoms spring to life
-
World Art Day
-
Llama Day
-
Miravet, Catalonia, Spain
-
Telašćica Nature Park, Dugi Otok, Croatia
-
Saskatchewan s spookier side
-
Here, fishy!
-
Assembling the Smithsonian
-
Bidding summer adieu
-
It s truffle season here in the Dordogne Valley
-
Kiteboarding and windsurfing in Croatia
-
Easter Sunday
-
Ribblehead Viaduct, North Yorkshire, England
-
International Kissing Day
-
Happy Easter!
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

