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Alternative letter-case form of ultima Thule(“a place beyond the known world; highest achievement”)
1875, “North-West Pembrokeshire”, in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, page 288:
[…]the metropolis of our far west, and about as neat and picturesque an assize town as ever was, with its fine old castle overhanging the river, and, like many of these Ultimæ Thules of civilisation, having several good shops and handsome churches !
From ultima Thule(“furthest place; a place beyond the known world”).
The object was first observed in 2014 and announced later that year as a potential target for NASA's New Horizons probe. In March 2018, after inviting suggestions from the public, NASA selected Ultima Thule as its nickname. Once it was determined that the body was a bilobate contact binary, the New Horizons team began calling the larger lobe Ultima and the smaller Thule.
2018 March 13, “New Horizons Chooses Nickname for ‘Ultimate’ Flyby Target”, in NASA:
With substantial public input, the team has chosen “Ultima Thule” (pronounced ultima thoo-lee”) for the Kuiper Belt object the New Horizons spacecraft will explore on Jan. 1, 2019.
2018 September 24, Paul Wood, “Preparing to meet Ultima Thule”, in Nature Astronomy:
Since NASA’s New Horizons mission left its rendezvous with the dwarf planet Pluto in late 2015, it has been preparing for another close encounter, with cold classical Kuiper belt object (CCKBO) 2014 MU69, also known as Ultima Thule
2020 May 8, J. I. Katz, S. Wang, “Arrokoth's Necklace”, in arXiv:
Flyby images of (486958) Arrokoth (Ultima Thule, 2014 MU69) show a comparatively bright "necklace" in the neck, or cleft between its two lobes, in contrast to its generally low albedo.
Usage notes
Although nominally farthest, Ultima Thule is not the farthest known object in the Solar System. Even at the time of its discovery, numerous scattered disc objects―which orbit well beyond the Kuiper belt―were already known. (Named examples include Eris and Sedna).
The nickname Ultima Thule was selected by NASA in 2018 (after inviting suggestions from the public) and used by them chiefly in respect of the 1 January 2019 flyby by their New Horizons probe. Prior to 2018, NASA had referred to it as PT1 ("potential target 1").
When it was determined that the body was a bilobate contact binary, the New Horizons team began calling the larger lobe Ultima and the smaller Thule.