Posted on 07/05/2007 12:40:25 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
NASA this weekend is set to launch a spacecraft that will journey to the asteroid belt that lies between Mars and Jupiter, a mission that involves a rendezvous with two of the solar system's largest asteroids.
Seeking clues about the birth of the solar system, the Dawn spacecraft will first encounter Vesta, the smaller of the two bodies, four years from now. In 2015, it will meet up with Ceres, which carries the status of both asteroid and, like Pluto, dwarf planet.
"We're trying to go back in time as well as to go out there in space," said planetary scientist Christopher Russell of University of California, Los Angeles, who is heading up the mission.
Weather permitting, Dawn is set to blast off Sunday afternoon from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on a Delta II rocket. The launch caps a tumultuous effort in which the $344 million mission was killed last year because of cost overruns and technical problems.
Ultimately, though, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, which manages the spacecraft, appealed to NASA Administrator Michael Griffin and got the project revived.
Adding to the drama, Ceres briefly flirted with planethood during last summer's scientific debate about whether Pluto is a planet. Both Pluto and Ceres were finally classified dwarf planets.
Vesta and Ceres are believed to have evolved in different parts of the solar system more than 4.5 billion years ago around the same time as the formation of the rocky planets including Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. Scientists believe the asteroids' growth was stunted by Jupiter's gravitational pull and never had the chance to become full-fledged planets.
Images by the Hubble Space Telescope show Vesta and Ceres as geologically diverse.
Mysteries abound: Why are Vesta and Ceres so different? How do size and water affect planet formation? What does the evolution of the asteroids say about Earth's formation?
Vesta, which measures 326 miles across, is dry and pocked with a deep impact crater in its southern hemisphere. By contrast, Ceres, about twice as large as Vesta, has a dusty surface covered by what appears to be an ice shell and may even contain water inside.
When Dawn reaches each asteroid, first Vesta in 2011, it will orbit each body, photographing the surface and studying the asteroid's interior makeup, density and magnetism. Pictures and data will be sent back to Earth.
Dawn will be powered by ion propulsion instead of conventional rocket fuel, making it more fuel-efficient and allowing it to cruise between the asteroids and lower itself to about 125 miles above the surface to study them in depth.
Although previous spacecraft have explored smaller asteroids, researchers hope Dawn will shed light on the solar system's origins.
"If you want to understand the Earth, it's important to understand how it came to be and that's where asteroids come in. They're the building blocks," said Jay Melosh, a planetary geologist at the University of Arizona who has no role of the Dawn mission.
I hope the research includes finding ways to keep one these suckers from whacking the earth.
That should keep the Klingons off Uranus.
I think it’s silly to talk about the asteroid belt and learning about the solar system’s origins. Silly. It’s obvious the asteroid belt and Oort cloud of comets are the remains of an exploded planet. One half of Mercury is as smooth as a baby’s butt, and the other half is pock-marked by impacts— consistent with a sudden explosion. It would also explain where Mars’ atmosphere and water went.
Bruce Willis on either of the flights?
I hope it goes. If not the launch will be delayed for months in order to get the next Mars probe launched within it’s window.
The weather looks like a mixed bag at this point..
http://www.wunderground.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?query=cape+canaveral%2Cfl
No Bruce on this mission, one of these days maybe, after he cranks out another DieHard. ;-)
Hopefully they’ll remember to reconcile the measurement units and calibrate the camera focus before launch this time.
Ceresly...
Well then, he could be on the mission cuz the latest die hard is in theatres. I think.
Just saw it yesterday, they blow’d a lot of stuff up, lots of good special effects,, even slipped a JSF F-35 in at the end,, I’ll give it a thumb and half for entertainment value, they hammed it up a bit, to say the least.
They’ve got until July 11th so barring another technical glitch they should be able to find a good weather day in that time.
.. they should be able to find a good weather day in that time.
—
I sure hope so.. I hope Daytona is dry Saturday Night too. Pepsi 400. :-)
I hope Daytona is dry Saturday Night too. Pepsi 400. :-)
Me too. Newman needs to win one.
Sunday's launch window will extend from 4:04 to 4:33 p.m. EDT
ping
New headline:
“...and everything went fine till they accidently bumped one and now it’s on a earthward-plunging orbit...”
Someone’s been reading your novel ping.
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