Recent images from the Hubble Space Telescope show a fifth moon orbiting Pluto. The discovery of P5, as it's called, heralds a new age of unlocking the mysteries of the outer reaches of our solar system.
Pluto was discovered in 1930 at Flagstaff's Lowell Observatory, using a telescope that focused light onto glass plates. The Pluto Discovery Telescope is still on display at the observatory's Mars Hill site, as is the device used to compare the plates.
More recently, the distant, icy world has been observed by Hubble. The latest images, taken in late June and early July, clearly show a fifth moon orbiting Pluto. Astronomers knew it had four, but were surprised to find a fifth satellite.
Larry Wasserman, an astronomer at Lowell Observatory and an expert on the Kuiper Belt, the region of space that Pluto inhabits, says we still know very little about Pluto. But that will change in 2015, when NASA's unmanned New Horizons probe arrives there to take pictures and collect data.
More resources:
Hubble Space Telescope's picture album of Pluto's 5th moon
Hubble Space Telescope's press release announcing discovery of P5
NASA's Kuiper Belt page
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