Photos, etc., released today:
NASA's Dawn Spacecraft Begins Science Orbits of Vesta
Frosty the Snowman lives on Vesta:
![]()
Everything I need to know I learned through Googling.
Right click, show image. It is much bigger than shown here.
There's a video of a full rotation of Vesta here:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/video/index.cfm?id=1009
Starting about a third of the way through there's some linear features that go at least a third of the way around the planet. Anyone have any speculation about what those are?
There is some decent speculation that they are related to the large impact "basin" that makes up the south polar region. Perhaps compression and extension features from the shockwave that resulted from it.
CJSF
"In the nightgown of the sullen moon, How the windows lean into the room, In the nightgown of the sullen moon."
-They Might Be Giants
NEOWatcher write
"Dark side?
It's a rotating body, how can it have a dark side? "
Actually there is a dark side to Vesta - the albedo is noticeably different between hemispheres. I think that it is more or less orthogonal to the N-S topographic difference. You can see the albedo variation in the rotation movie. Not all of the difference in that movie is due to lighting.
Emily at the Planetary Society Blog: What I see in the first high-res Dawn images of Vesta
Woohoo!Originally Posted by Emily
CJSF
"In the nightgown of the sullen moon, How the windows lean into the room, In the nightgown of the sullen moon."
-They Might Be Giants
Something that I just noticed that's sort of a "duh", but...
Looking at the larger impact craters, I noticed that they were missing the common rays that the Moon has on its craters, and then suddenly I realized, of course they wouldn't, the gravity is so much less, so material doesn't fall back down from a blast.
And some of the bits ended up on Earth.
Everything I need to know I learned through Googling.
The mission status page at JPL has announced that Dawn will enter her survey orbit on the 11th.
As an edit, let me speculate that the channels look a bit like crumple zones for a glancing impact on the south pole.
I think they look like "frozen" shockwaves from a direct impact.
CJSF
"In the nightgown of the sullen moon, How the windows lean into the room, In the nightgown of the sullen moon."
-They Might Be Giants
Those are absolutely amazing images, and well worth the wait.
I can only echo the speculation that those grooves are related to stresses from the enormous south polar impact. Perhaps some day in the far future we'll send down some seismometers with a Deep Impact-style impactor and figure out just what kind of damage that thing did to Vesta's interior, if any.
Love the new images.
Have a Vesta Fiesta!
I won't be able to make any larger events, but maybe the wife and I will have some tacos and decorate the house a bit. The cats would love that, anyways.Yes! Vesta Fiestas will rock the nation – one may be yours! Consider this your official invitation to join the celebration by hosting an event with your club, society, school group, or museum. Stay tuned for on-going cool connections with Dawn mission scientists, opportunities for networking with a local observatory, materials for recruiting fiesta-goers, and great activities for the party itself.
CJSF
"In the nightgown of the sullen moon, How the windows lean into the room, In the nightgown of the sullen moon."
-They Might Be Giants
It sounds like a lot of fun, I just wish they'd announced it earlier so we'd have time to prepare.
New Image Posted on August 4, 2011:
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/...age_073111.aspNASA's Dawn spacecraft obtained this image with its framing camera on July 31, 2011. It was taken from a distance of about 2,300 miles (3,700 kilometers) away from the giant asteroid Vesta.
Defunct, four membered Klemperer rosette.![]()
Dawn has achieved survey orbit (circular and polar orbit of 2700 kilometers (1700 miles)) around Vesta. In a couple of days, the science of the survey orbit will begin.
:-)
"In the nightgown of the sullen moon, How the windows lean into the room, In the nightgown of the sullen moon."
-They Might Be Giants
Image Release for September 8, 2011:
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/...?date=20110908
When you open the "Full Size Image" it shows a different shot of Vesta:
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/...1_031_full.jpg
ETA: They have fixed the image to show the proper shot now.
Last edited by bunker9603; 2011-Sep-09 at 12:31 PM.
er, why is it unusual?
When the brilliant Emily Lakdawalla has the same complaint, you know you're onto something.
Everything I need to know I learned through Googling.
Cool photos and video:
NASA's Dawn Collects a Bounty of Beauty from Vesta
Everything I need to know I learned through Googling.
Do you mean Vesta? It is unusual and interesting because it is a large asteroid on the size-boundary of making itself round through self gravitation. This includes being unusual because it is large. There are very few free-orbiting bodies larger than this in the inner solar system.
The mission is interesting because it may provide us with information about where future landers may want to investigate.
Aside from that, it is easy to look at it and say it is "just an asteroid".
Forming opinions as we speak