NASA: Icy object past Pluto looks like reddish snowman

This image made available by NASA on Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2019 shows images with separate color and detail information, and a composited image of both, showing Ultima Thule, about 1 billion miles beyond Pluto. The New Horizons spacecraft encountered it on Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2019. (NASA via AP)
This image made available by NASA on Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2019 shows images with separate color and detail information, and a composited image of both, showing Ultima Thule, about 1 billion miles beyond Pluto. The New Horizons spacecraft encountered it on Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2019. (NASA via AP)
photo This image made available by NASA on Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2019 shows the size and shape of the object Ultima Thule, about 1 billion miles beyond Pluto. The New Horizons spacecraft encountered it on Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2019. (NASA via AP)

LAUREL, Md. (AP) - A NASA spacecraft 4 billion miles from Earth yielded its first close-up pictures Wednesday of the most distant celestial object ever explored, depicting what looks like a reddish snowman.

Ultima Thule, as the small, icy object has been dubbed, was found to consist of two fused-together spheres, one of them three times bigger than the other, extending about 21 miles (33 kilometers) in length.

NASA's New Horizons, the spacecraft that sent back pictures of Pluto 3 years ago, swept past the ancient, mysterious object early on New Year's Day. It is 1 billion miles (1.6 billion kilometers) beyond Pluto.

On Tuesday, based on early, fuzzy images taken the day before, scientists said Ultima Thule resembled a bowling pin. But when better, closer pictures arrived, a new consensus emerged Wednesday.

"The bowling pin is gone. It's a snowman!" lead scientist Alan Stern informed the world from Johns Hopkins University's Applied Physics Laboratory , home to Mission Control. The bowling pin image is "so 2018," joked Stern, who is with the Southwest Research Institute.

photo This image from video made available by NASA on Wednesday, Jan. 2, 2019 shows a diagram describing the size and shape of the object Ultima Thule, about 1 billion miles beyond Pluto. The New Horizons spacecraft encountered it on Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2019. (NASA via AP)

The team has labeled the bigger sphere Ultima and the smaller one Thule.

Scientist Jeff Moore of NASA's Ames Research Center said the two spheres formed when icy, pebble-size pieces coalesced in space billions of years ago. Then the spheres slowly spiraled closer to each other until they gently touched - as slowly as parking a car here on Earth at just a mile or two per hour - and stuck together.

Despite the slender connection point, the two lobes are "soundly bound" together, according to Moore.

Scientists have ascertained that the object takes about 15 hours to make a full rotation. If it were spinning fast - say, one rotation every three or four hours - the two spheres would rip apart.

photo NASA's New Horizons spacecraft has survived humanity's most distant exploration of another world. / Diagram from NASA

Stern noted that the team has received less than 1 percent of all the data stored aboard New Horizons. It will take nearly two years to get it all.

About the size of a city, Ultima Thule has a mottled appearance the color of dull brick, with brighter and darker regions. Both spheres are similarly red, while the barely perceptible neck connecting the two lobes is noticeably less red, probably because of particles falling down the steep slopes into that area.

So far, no moons or rings have been detected. And scientists said there were no obvious impact craters in the latest photos but a few apparent "divots" and suggestions of hills and ridges. But better images should yield definitive answers in the days and weeks ahead.

Clues about the surface composition of Ultima Thule should start rolling in by Thursday. Scientists believe the icy exterior is probably a mix of water, methane and nitrogen, among other things.

The snowman picture was taken a half-hour before the spacecraft's closest approach early Tuesday, from a distance of about 18,000 miles (28,000 kilometers).

Ultima Thule is an exquisite time machine - the most primitive object ever seen close up - that should provide clues to the origin of our solar system 4.5 billion years ago.

It's neither a comet nor an asteroid, according to Stern, but rather "a primordial planetesimal." Unlike comets and other objects that have been altered by the sun, Ultima Thule is in its pure, original state: It's been in the deep-freeze Kuiper Belt on the fringes of our solar system from the beginning.

"This thing was born somewhere between 99 percent and 99.9 percent of the way back to T-minus-zero (liftoff) in our solar system, really amazing," Stern said. He added: "We've never seen anything like this before. It's not fish or fowl. It's something that's completely different."

Still, he said, when all the data comes in, "there are going to be mysteries of Ultima Thule that we can't figure out."

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