News on research satellites
- Will we ever travel to an earthlike exoplanet and how?
- The "Pioneer anomali" explained
- DAWN will stay with Vesta for an extra 40 days
- Voygare 1 still far from the interstellar medium
- Nuclear spaceship being prepared for launch
- Rocket launched into Aurora
- Satellite images of nighttime lights help track disease outbreak
- Voyage1 shuts down heat but continues another 13 years
- Voyager1 reaches a pause to interstellar space
- First images from VIIRS
- First space-measurements of Earths water-vapor
- Mission to touch the Sun in 2018
- Manned mission to asteroid
- ROSAT crashes to Earth
- ESA chooses next two science missions
- UARS satellite plunged into the Pacific Ocean
- Exploring an asteroid with the Desert RATS
- UARS satellite crashed - location unknown
- The 6 ton UARS satelite crasches tonight
- Underwater training for manned asteroid mission underwater
- 6ton NASA satellite soon to crash
- Spacejunk is a problem but tiny bits are worse
- Tour the Solarsystem with spaceprobes
- Jupiter-Bound spacecraft captures Earth and Moon
- Juno Spacecraft Launches to Jupiter
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Rosetta spots its target 163km away
Thursday, 09 June 2011 13:28
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| Spaceflight - Research satellites |
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These pictures were generated during the tests performed by the team during the last weeks. After the successful completion of these tests, Rosetta will now start its almost three year hibernation period: In order to save energy on the last part of the way offering only little sunlight, all systems will be powered down. In these first images comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko appears as a single point of light covering only a few pixels. "But the pictures already give us a good idea of where we are headed", says Dr. Holger Sierks from MPS, OSIRIS Lead Investigator. "In addition, they are a remarkable proof of the camera's performance. We had not expected to be able to create first images from so far away". Comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko is extremely faint. Its brightness is approximately a million times less then that of the faintest star that can be discerned from Earth with the naked eye. Astronomers studying the comet from Earth use the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope in Chile, one of the world's most powerful telescopes with a main mirror diameter of eight meters. OSIRIS's mirror measures only approximately ten centimeters in diameter. In order to make the comet visible despite these challenges, an exposure time of 13 hours was necessary. "All in all, we took 52 images with OSIRIS, each exposed for 15 minutes", explains Dr. Colin Snodgrass from MPS, responsible for data processing. Since within a period of a few hours the comet moves relative to the background of fixed stars, the first step was to align all of the images and correct for this motion. After further refined steps of data processing (for example subtracting the fixed stars) the researchers were able to catch a first glimpse of their destination. Before they get a chance at a second glimpse, it will, however, be a long wait. The systems on board Rosetta will be powered down today for approximately three years. In this way the solar panel powered spacecraft saves energy while it is far from the Sun - until it reawakens in the spring of 2014 and takes a next look at "its" comet. The spacecraft Rosetta has been en route to comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko since 2004. OSIRIS, the scientific camera system on board, was developed and built under the lead of the MPS in cooperation with a team bringing together members of six European countries. It consists of a wide- and a narrow-angle camera. The camera system is operated by scientists from MPS. Source: Max Planck Institute |




163 million km still separate ESA's spacecraft Rosetta from comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko, its 2014 target. Despite this remarkable distance, scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (MPS) in Germany have succeeded in obtaining the first images of the remote destination using the onboard camera system OSIRIS.