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A team of scientists at NASA have put together a map of Pluto — the most detailed map to date — using images gathered in July and transmitted back over the last ten months.

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“The team will continue to add photos as the spacecraft transmits the rest of its stored Pluto encounter data,” NASA said in a statement. “All encounter imagery is expected on Earth by early fall.”

Viewers can view the map in its entirety, and even zoom in, here.

The images were acquired by the New Horizons spacecraft, which launched as part of the New Frontiers project in 2006. After approaching Jupiter in 2007, it spent years in orbit before starting its trajectory toward Pluto in early 2015.

As it approached the dwarf planet, New Horizons captured images allowing NASA to make a composite of a “day” for Pluto, a rotation which takes about 6.4 Earth days to complete.

According to NASA, the images used for the map were taken between July 7–14, 2015, the 14th being the spacecraft’s closest approach and therefore having images with the greatest detail.

The images are at pixel resolutions ranging from 30 kilometers on the left and right edges of the map to 235 meters at the map’s centre, the NASA website explains.

“The non-encounter hemisphere was seen from much greater range and is, therefore, in far less detail.”