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Quote from: BUncle on July 16, 2015, 10:34:11 pmWe will never truly begin to know Pluto until we've seen it up close through a full solar pluto-year...The 3 generations around the time Pluto goes within Neptune's orbit should be sufficient.No idea how long it takes Pluto's 'atmosphere' to condense after perihelion, but I remember reading NASA (or people within NASA) wanted a probe out there before Pluto's 'atmosphere' disappeared. And we're already half a generation after Pluto went beyond Neptune's orbit again (since 1999).
We will never truly begin to know Pluto until we've seen it up close through a full solar pluto-year...