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Quantum fluctuations in science, space and society, from quarks to Hubble and Mars. Served up by Alan Boyle, NBC News Digital science editor. E-mail Alan, or connect via Facebook, Twitter or Google+.

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  • 11
    Sep
    2012
    4:13pm, EDT

    NASA shares parting shots of Vesta

    NASA / JPL-Caltech / UCLA / MPS / DLR / IDA

    This image mosaic synthesizes some of the best views that NASA's Dawn spacecraft obtained during more than a year in orbit around the asteroid Vesta. A towering mountain, rising more than twice the height of Mount Everest, sticks out from the south pole at the bottom of the image. A chain of three craters known as the "Snowman" can be seen at top left.

    By Alan Boyle, Science Editor, NBC News

    Follow @b0yle


    NASA's Dawn mission is saying Hasta la Vesta with a series of parting shots showing the asteroid Vesta, unveiled as the probe hightails it for the dwarf planet Ceres, the next stop on its eight-year, 3-billion-mile (5-billion-kilometer) itinerary.

    The newly released pictures were taken as the Dawn probe wound down more than a year's worth of observations while in orbit around Vesta, an acorn-shaped world in the main asteroid belt. Dawn's $466 million mission was launched in 2007 and is aimed at studying the composition of Vesta as well as Ceres, two huge asteroids that are thought to preserve a record of the solar system's earliest days.


    Dawn's data showed that Vesta has a chemically complex surface and an iron core. Based on its scars, the protoplanet appears to have suffered a mighty cosmic impact not just once, but twice in the past couple of billion years.

    If it weren't for Jupiter's disruptive gravitational influence, Vesta might well have grown to become a major planet. "We can now say with certainty that Vesta resembles a small planet more closely than a typical asteroid," UCLA's Christopher Russell, the mission's principal investigator, said last month.

    Dawn officially left Vesta's orbit during the night of Sept. 4-5, and its ion propulsion drive is gently pushing the probe toward a rendezvous with Ceres in 2015. Russell and his colleagues said today's images represent the last routine daily delivery from the mission during the three-year cruise, although other images may be highlighted as fresh findings are made.

    "Dawn has peeled back the veil on some of the mysteries surrounding Vesta, but we're still working hard on more analysis," Russell said in today's news release. "So while Vesta is now out of sight, it will not be out of mind."

    NASA / JPL-Caltech / UCLA / MPS / DLR / IDA

    An elevation map from NASA's Dawn probe shows the topography of the northern and southern hemispheres of Vesta, updated with readings gathered during Dawn's last look back. Colors represent distance relative to Vesta's center, with lows in violet and highs in red.

    NASA / JPL-Caltech / UCLA / MPS / DLR / IDA

    This image from NASA's Dawn mission, released Sept. 10, shows a shadowy view of the asteroid Vesta's northern hemisphere, using pictures obtained during Dawn's last look back. The mosaic is composed of five images obtained by Dawn's framing camera on Aug. 26, while the probe was at an altitude of 4,000 miles (6,000 kilometers).

    This video highlights Dawn's top accomplishments during its orbit around the giant asteroid Vesta.

    Watch on YouTube

    Researchers expect to see a markedly different world when Dawn gets to Ceres. Unlike 330-mile-wide (530-kilometer-wide) Vesta, 583-mile-wide (940-kilometer-wide) Ceres is so massive that its gravity has crushed the world into a basically spherical shape — which is why the International Astronomical Union classifies it as a dwarf planet. Ceres has a differentiated crust, icy mantle and core, and may have a higher water content than Earth.

    Follow @CosmicLog

    "Almost everything we see at Ceres will be a surprise, and totally different from Vesta," Russell said last week.

    Months after Dawn's arrival at Ceres, NASA's New Horizons probe will fly by my favorite dwarf planet, Pluto, and its brood of moons. How will Ceres and Pluto compare? Will we see polar frost caps on Ceres? Ice volcanoes on Pluto? Stay tuned for 2015, the year of the dwarf planets.

    More about Vesta and the dwarfs:

    • Vesta is a protoplanet, scientists say
    • Flash interactive: The new solar system
    • Take a tour of five dwarf planets
    • Pluto debate is about more than just one little world

    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

    20 comments

    Very interesting! We need to boost our space traveling capabilities. ISS, space taxis to the moon, base on the moon, plans for Mars and beyond. Lets go USA, get movin!

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  • 18
    Jun
    2010
    11:19pm, EDT

    Dwarf planets have their day

    Starry Night Software via Space.com

    This graphic shows the June 18 positions of Pluto and Ceres with relation to other celestial objects, including the "teapot" in the constellation Sagittarius. The positions of the dwarf planets change slightly from night to night.

    Dwarf planets are big this month.

    Writing for Space.com, Starry Night Education's Geoff Gaherty points out that two of the best-known dwarf planets, Pluto and Ceres, are in prime positions for viewing over the next couple of weeks. That's because they're reaching opposition - the point in the celestial scheme of things when a celestial body is directly opposite the sun, as seen from Earth. That's generally the best time to see any planetary object because it's relatively big and close.

    "Big and close" is not a term you often hear applied to Ceres, and especially to Pluto. But if you have a chance to see these dwarfs, particularly through a telescope that's big and close, this is the time to do it.

    Ceres comes into opposition tonight in the constellation Sagittarius, and should be visible as a magnitude-7.2 object. That's not bright enough to see with the naked eye, but a good pair of binoculars or a small telescope should bring it into view. Gaherty recommends using a star atlas or planetarium software to check the position, and looking for it a couple of nights later to make sure the object you were seeing has moved with respect to the background stars.

    Pluto is more of a challenge: It comes into opposition on June 25, when the moon is nearly full and close to Pluto's position in the sky. Moreover, Pluto is much dimmer - magnitude 14, which is why it was such a challenge for Clyde Tombaugh to discover the darn thing 80 years ago. Tombaugh found it while poring over photographic plates made with a 13-inch telescope, and you'll need a telescope with a mirror about the same size to see it this month. You'll also want to dredge up a detailed finder chart. The easiest thing to do might be to buddy up with your local astronomy club and cajole somebody with a big scope into giving you a look.

    Or you could wait until 2015, when the Dawn probe (heading for Ceres) and the New Horizons probe (heading for Pluto) are due to make their closest approaches. The New Horizons probe was awakened from its slumber a few weeks ago for a thorough checkup. Just this week, the spacecraft passed the halfway point between Earth's location at the time of its 2006 launch and Pluto's projected location for the 2015 flyby. Today NASA Science News published a nice update on New Horizons' progress and what lies ahead.

    One quibble I have with Gaherty's report is that he defines a dwarf planet as "a solar system object which is too small to qualify as a planet." Actually, dwarf planets are indeed big enough to be planets, because they're massive enough to crush themselves into balls through self-gravity. That's the definition the International Astronomical Union came up with four years ago, during a contentious meeting in Prague. According to the IAU, the distinction is that a dwarf planet has not "cleared the neighborhood of its orbit." Does that mean dwarfs should be ruled out as "real" planets? The IAU says yes, but I've tried to make the case that Pluto and Ceres are just different types of planets. You can read all about it in my book, "The Case for Pluto."

    Another dwarf planet, Haumea, came in for a shout-out this week when astronomers reported their estimates for the size and brightness of an icy object that was apparently struck off Haumea long ago. The cleverest part of the observation was that they made their estimates based on how the object, known as 2002 TX300, blocked out the starlight shining from behind it. I ran that research past Caltech astronomer Mike Brown, the leader of the team that discovered Haumea in 2005, and here's part of what he said in his e-mailed reply:

    "It's a really pretty paper. The light curve from Maui is just jaw-dropping. People have been trying this sort of thing for a long, long time and everyone has wondered when the first one would pay off. ...

    "It's pretty clear that objects this small have no viable resurfacing mechanism, so the only solution is that fresh water ice is able to retain its fresh appearance in spite of bombardment. We've basically had to accept that for a while now, with all of the small water-icy Haumea family members around. TX300 is on a nicely stable orbit, so it should be around pretty much until the end of the solar system. No comet fun, like Haumea itself might get to do.

    "All in all, a fun paper. I love this sort of astronomy where it takes the work of many people and many small telescopes rather than the pounding by one big telescope. A nicely satisfying result, and the fact that the clincher came from the parking lot half way up the mountain on Mauna Kea is just fabulous!"

    Check out "Mike Brown's Planets" to get his perspective on 2002 TX300 as well as Haumea and the other dwarf planets, plus the reasons why he thinks they should not be considered real planets. Later this year you'll also be able to read his book, "How I Killed Pluto and Why It Had It Coming" ... but please, read mine first.

    Update for 3:15 p.m. ET June 20: More perspectives on dwarf planets may be on the way ... longtime Plutophile Laurel Kornfeld says she's working on a book titled "The Little Planet That Would Not Die: Pluto's Story." She references her project in the comments below and includes a link to her Live Journal blog. Mark Sykes, director of the Arizona-based Planetary Science Institute and a member of the Dawn science team, has long talked of writing a book about Ceres, "The Littlest Planet." You can hear Sykes discuss the subject in this "Nova" podcast.


    Join the Cosmic Log corps by signing up as my Facebook friend or hooking up on Twitter. And if you really want to be friendly, ask me about "The Case for Pluto."

    5 comments

    Thanks for the heads up on viewing the dwarf planets Alan! It's still another 5 years before we get to see some closeups of Pluto as it sure takes a long time for a probe to get there from here. Should be interesting to see how Pluto looks up close and what possible surprises it may hold.

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