<![CDATA[io9: kuiper belt]]> http://tags.lifehacker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/io9.com.png <![CDATA[io9: kuiper belt]]> http://io9.com/tag/kuiperbelt http://io9.com/tag/kuiperbelt <![CDATA[When We Reach Pluto, The Adventure Will Just Be Beginning]]> In 2015, NASA's New Horizons spacecraft will reach Pluto and its frosty moon, Charon. But the journey of discovery will just be beginning, as New Horizons ventures out into the Kuiper Belt, made up of icy bodies just like Pluto.

Whether or not you believe Pluto is still a planet, it turns out there are tons more bodies in our solar system just like it. As Wired.com explains, we went from thinking that Pluto was a uniquely icy planet among our system of rocky planets and gas giants to realizing that we have a ton of icy planet(oid)s out in the Kuyper Belt:

"When Pluto was first discovered in 1930, it just looked like an oddball," [planetary scientist Alan] Stern said. "We had the four rocky, terrestrial planets and the four big gas giants, and then we had this odd thing Pluto."

But with the discovery of the Kuiper Belt in the 1990s, scientists discovered that the small, icy orb was hardly unique. "We found out that there are a lot of Plutos," Stern said. "In fact, it's the dominant class of planets in the solar system. This transformed our view not only of the solar system, but also of the importance of sending a spacecraft to Pluto. We realized that we had never sent a spacecraft to the most common type of planet."

The Kuiper Belt sounds more and more intriguing as we discover more — like the mysterious red spot on the surface of Haumea, one of the largest objects there. The red spot may be a gas leak, or the result of a recent collision. But most of all, there's the fact that if we ever do get our lazy asses out of this solar system on our way to other stars, then whatever resources are in the Kuiper Belt will be a crucial refueling stop.

Photo by Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute. [Wired]

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<![CDATA[Dawn in the Oort Cloud]]> If you're wondering about the sunny view from the Oort Cloud, that vast sphere of debris that surrounds our solar system, here it is. As we told you yesterday, scientists now believe this remote, cold region might house another Earth-like planet. Only it would be frozen. Want to travel a little closer to the sun, and watch Jupiter rising over its frozen moon Europa?

I love this picture because I'm just finishing up John Varley's new novel Rolling Thunder (due out in March), which is partly set on Europa. The main character has a view of Jupiter from her window in the habitat where she lives on Europa. exploringSpace_cover_big.jpg Image via NASA.

And finally, here's a nice image for getting some perspective on where the Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud are relative to the rest of the solar system. kuiper_oort.jpgImage via NASA.

Top image via Calvin J. Hamilton.

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