News on Comets
- Comet Elenin is no more!
- Sea-water in comets!
- This Autumns celestial show: Comet Elenin
- Warning of a future cometary impact?
- SOHO watches a comet fade away
- Comet Hartley2 leaves a bumpy tail
- Comet Hartley is a hyperactive little comet
- Discovery of new comet that may be from interstellar space
- New insigth on comets
- Liqiud water on comets
- The sound of a passage through a comet -nucleus
- Closeup images of man-made crater on comet Tempel1
- Images from the Stardust-Tempel1 rendevouz downloadet
- First images from comet Tempel1 receiwed
- StardustNext a few hours from comet Tempel1
- Rendevouz with a comet monday
- WISE completes scan for asteroids and comets
- Stardust-NExT comet-hunter spots its target
- 2000 comets discovered by Solar observatory
- A comets atmosphere
- Spacecraft adjust course for another comet rendevouz
- Snowstorm from comet Hartley2
- Carbon dioxide - not water - fules comet jets
- Comet Hartley2s nucleus from EPOXI
- Space-radar images of comet Hartley2
|
Rosetta’s blind date with asteroid Lutetia
Wednesday, 16 June 2010 11:52
|
|
| Solar system - Comets | ||||||||
|
The close pass will allow around 2 hours of good imaging. The spacecraft will instantly begin beaming the data back to Earth and the first pictures will be released later that evening. Rosetta flew by asteroid Steins in 2008 and other space missions have encountered a handful of asteroids. Each asteroid has proven to be an individual and Lutetia is expected to continue the trend. For a start, no one knows what it looks like up-close. Orbiting in the main belt of asteroids between Mars and Jupiter, it appears as a single point of light to most ground telescopes. The continuous variation in its brightness makes it clear that Lutetia is rotating and has an uneven surface. These observations allow astronomers to estimate its shape and size, but their determinations all differ. Initially it was thought that Lutetia is around 95 km in diameter but only mildly elliptical. A more recent estimate suggests 134 km, with a pronounced elongation. Rosetta will tell us for certain and will also investigate the composition of the asteroid, wherein lies another mystery. By any measure, Lutetia is quite large. Planetary scientists believe that it is a primitive asteroid left on the shelf for billions of years because no planet consumed it as the Solar System formed. Indeed, most measurements appear to back this picture, making the asteroid out to be a ‘C-type’, which contains primitive compounds of carbon.
However, some measurements suggest that Lutetia is an ‘M-type’, which could mean there are metals in its surface. “If Lutetia is a metallic asteroid then we have found a real winner,” says Rita Schulz, ESA Rosetta Project Scientist. That is because although metallic asteroids do exist, they are thought to be fragments of the metallic core of larger asteroids that have since been shattered into pieces. If Lutetia is made of metal or even contains large amounts of metal, Dr Schulz says that the traditional asteroid classification scheme will need rethinking. “C-class asteroids should not have metals on their surfaces,” she says. Asteroid science stands to gain once this observational conundrum is resolved because Rosetta’s data will provide a valuable collection of ‘ground truths’ that can be used to resolve conflicting ground-based observations not just for Lutetia but for other asteroids as well.
For 36 hours around the moment of closest approach, Rosetta will be in almost continuous contact with the ground. The only breaks will come as Earth rotates and engineers have to switch from one tracking station to another. Good contact is essential because the uncertainties in the asteroid’s position and shape may demand last minute fine-tuning to keep it centred in Rosetta’s instruments during the flyby. “The skeleton of the operation is in place, and we have the ability to update our plans at any time,” says Andrea Accomazzo, ESA Rosetta Spacecraft Operations Manager. Stay in touch with the flyby as it happens by visiting the Rosetta blog. Source: ESA |




ESA’s comet-chaser Rosetta is heading for a blind date with asteroid Lutetia. Rosetta does not yet know what Lutetia looks like up-close but beautiful or otherwise the two will meet on 10 July.
