News on asteroids
- Infrared survey exposes Nnera-Earth asteroid threaths
- ESA invites amateur astronomers to asteroid-hunti
- Dawn uncovers mineraology of the asteroid Vesta
- Dawn sees new surface features on giant asteroid
- Near-miss asteroid will pass earth again in 2013
- Asteroid hits house in Oslo, Norway
- Space-environment of an asteroid
- Bus-sized asteroid passes Earth
- Vesta is most likely cold enough to contain water-ice
- First images of Vesta from low-orbit
- Fresh impact craters on asteroid Vesta
- Take a virtual 3D tour over asteroid Vesta
- High-school student doubles NEO-tracking accuracy
- Asteroid YU55 is just a pile of rocks
- More images of asteroid 2005 YU55
- New video of asteroid 2005 YU55
- Asteroid Lutetia: A rare surviver from the birth of the Earth
- First video of asteroid 2005YU55
- New images of asteroid passing Earth
- 400m asteroid passes Earth tuesday
- Asteroid Lutetia is a "failed planet"
- Large asteroid passing Earth nov. 4
- Researchers reconstruct asteroid impact
- Asteroid displays comet-like tail
- The mysteries of asteroid Minerva and its moons
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The dawn spacecraft is closing in on asteroid Vesta
Wednesday, 04 May 2011 10:53
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| Solar system - Asteroids |
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The Dawn spacecraft has reached its official approach phase to the asteroid Vesta and will begin using cameras for the first time to aid navigation for an expected July 16 orbital encounter. The large asteroid is known as a protoplanet - a celestial body that almost formed into a planet. At the start of this three-month final approach to this massive body in the asteroid belt, Dawn is 1,21 million km from Vesta, or about three times the distance between Earth and the moon. During the approach phase, the spacecraft's main activity will be thrusting with a special, hyper-efficient ion engine that uses electricity to ionize and accelerate xenon. The 30cm-wide ion thrusters provide less thrust than conventional engines, but will provide propulsion for years during the mission and provide far greater capability to change velocity. These images and simulations are so far the bestwe have obtained from the ESA/NASA Hubble Space Telescope Scientists will search the framing camera images for possible moons around Vesta. None of the images from ground-based and Earth-orbiting telescopes have seen any moons, but Dawn will give scientists much more detailed images to determine whether small objects have gone undiscovered. |





"After more than 3½ years of interplanetary travel, we are finally closing in on our first destination," said Marc Rayman, Dawn's chief engineer, at NASA's JPL. "We're not there yet, but Dawn will soon bring into focus an entire world that has been, for most of the two centuries scientists have been studying it, little more than a pinpoint of light."