Current Position

The computer-generated images below show the location of New Horizons in the solar system.

Follow New Horizons as it passed each planet's orbit, starting with our own moon.

What is an AU?

One Astronomical Unit (AU) is the average distance between the Sun and Earth, about 93 million miles or 149.6 million kilometers.

Heliocentric Velocity

The spacecraft’s heliocentric velocity is its speed relative to the Sun, measured in km/s. One km/s = 0.62 mi/s or 2,237 mph.

Full Trajectory: Side View

The green line shows where New Horizons has traveled; the red indicates its future path.

Full Trajectory: Overhead View

This perspective looks from above the Sun and “north” of Earth’s orbit.

Passing Planets

Check below to see where each planet was when New Horizons zoomed by.

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Passing Arrokoth

New Horizons continued on its unparalleled journey with the first-ever exploration of a primordial Kuiper Belt object called 2014 MU69 — officially named Arrokoth (Powhatan/Algonquian for "sky") — on January 1, 2019. New Horizons approached Arrokoth three times closer than it came to Pluto, resulting in even more detailed pictures and other data.

Journey through the Kuiper Belt

The image below shows the path of New Horizons through the solar system and Kuiper Belt objects it will observe.

Diagram of journey to Kuiper Belt
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