First specialized asteroid mission and NEARly forgotten one. And first landing on asteroid!
So it's time to change it.
First image is Mathilde in enhanced colors from 450, 550 and 700 nm filters.
Second is artificially colorised high resolution mosaic (116 m/pix).
Mathilde stereo pair and contrast enhanced artificially colorised image of Mathilde.
I would not say totally forgotten! Here is a 1/36 scale model of NEAR I scratch built many years ago. A college chum and close friend was the structural engineer on the project. He works at JHU/APL.
Rob
My first mosaic of Eros.
It's from raw data and because I haven't got calibration data yet, it isn't perfect.
But still it's maybe highest resolution color mosaic of Eros available (Eros is really forgotten object).
Correction:
I use wrong date (product creation time)! So now it's correct. I'm sorry.
Very nice! We had a thread on here until a year ago about Eros, so it's not totally forgotten, but there's a lot more that could be done with the images.
Phil
http://ser.sese.asu.edu/NEAR/HANDM/index.html
Wow, tedstyrk, thanks for that link!
YEARS and years ago - probably 3, 4 maybe years before UMSF - I did some mosaics of NEAR images that made it to space.com Probably my first 'public' stitching work
You existed pre-UMSF?
Bingo - Feb 2001
http://www.space.com/missionlaunches/missions/near_stitchedpics_010228.html
Are they the first 'bootleg postcards' in the specialist press?
Wow. So technically you were "born" in the year 3 BU...and here it is, almost 6 AU already!
9 years? You think I'd have learnt to grow up by now
Spaceviews and Space.com had used some of my Soviet work at the time, but that is all I can think of.
Wonderfull site, thanks for the link Ted Stryk. I already bookmark this page.
<O.T.> Long before "Photoshop" became a verb, like 1997 or so, some images I created were circulated among reporters I knew from work, and a reporter from USA Today eventually got his hands on them and did a small segment that they called "Altered Reality" or something like that. I was going to make a wildlife calendar of absurd scenes, like the annual migration of Mono Lake penguins returning to California's high desert. A couple of those were printed and I probably have that story in a box somewhere. I really should get around to doing that project now that we have high res SLRs and tools we didn't have back then. </O.T.>
Mosaic from end of the mission.
Color is slightly brownish, but entirely artificial.
...WOW!!! Thanks, Machi!!!
It's amazing how mosaics really bring out the character of a region on a world in a way that single frames just can't. To me, the vast majority of those 'craters' look like collapse pits of some sort. This implies a dusty, not-very-dense regolith subject to mass-wasting events, which sort of makes sense given the very low gravitation (& also probably similar to the surface of comets, albeit with different regolith materials.)
If that conjecture is true, then the obvious question is how did Eros hang onto this loose coating after billions of years of impacts that doubtless shook the hell out of it many, many times? Is the dust self-generated, perhaps by repeated thermal cycles as the asteroid rotates?
Wow, that's pretty neat.
What is the scale resolution of the final frame? I always wondered how far NEAR was from Eros when that image was taken, how long before landing it was, and how large those rocks were.
Final resolution is 1.2 cm/pix. Altitude was around 125 meters. All images are resampled to same resolution as final image.
Ah, interesting. Thanks. =)
Of curiosity, why were there no images taken (?) after landing? Camera not pointed at Eros? Eros would have been out of focus?
I believe the camera was under the spacecraft.
I believe that the HGA was also occluded upon landing; they lost contact with NEAR at that very moment.
They communicated via the LGA for about a month, returning gamma ray data from the surface.
Ah! Forgot that, Ted, thanks!
You're awake at odd hours lately...bet I know why!!! (It helps to remind yourself that it's not forever, man; been there!)
Re-launching NEAR off of Eros was briefly considered!
http://www.space.com/missionlaunches/missions/near_relaunch_010212.html
Also, if memory serves, an attempt at re-contact was made some months later with no success.
Apologies for the thread necromancy, but I recently reprocessed a few imaging mosaics from the early and mid orbital phases around Eros.
https://flic.kr/p/29daKtr
https://flic.kr/p/29daKtr
https://flic.kr/p/KwGDdk
https://flic.kr/p/KwGDdk
https://flic.kr/p/29daKse
https://flic.kr/p/29daKse
https://flic.kr/p/KwGDaV
https://flic.kr/p/KwGDaV
Hopefully will have some time to put together more soon!
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