Vesta departure and journey to Ceres, A new phase of Dawn adventure |
Vesta departure and journey to Ceres, A new phase of Dawn adventure |
Aug 26 2012, 05:45 AM
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 2492 Joined: 15-January 05 From: center Italy Member No.: 150 |
As suggested by "TheAnt", is time to start a new thread!
Due to lack of updates from "Mystic simulator", I asked directly to Marc Rayman for an update and he kindly sent me the following "unofficial" plots, showing evolution of distance, radial velocity and sub-spacecraft latitude (radius trend is splitted in two plots with different scales due to huge variation of the distance): I did not publish them immediately because I wanted to integrate them with my previous plots but, due to the lack of time in last week, I decided to post them directly with only minimal changes. As you can see, third engine stop occurred on Aug 8-18 at almost 2300km above Vesta while next (final) one is just started and, as reported by Marc in his latest journal, will be used to map North polar regions from 6000km distance. Thereafter thrust will resume and, based on plots, on Sept 5 total speed will overcome escape velocity (almost 45 m/s), so total energy balance will be zero; definitive exit from Vesta Hill sphere should occur after 20 days but consider that the times could slighty change due to orbit refinement and thrust plan changes. -------------------- I always think before posting! - Marco -
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Jan 4 2015, 10:27 PM
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Member Group: Members Posts: 495 Joined: 12-February 12 Member No.: 6336 |
@PDP8E: Yes it is really to early to see anything on Ceres yet.
But keep it up and in a little over a month we might get to see the first detail. Hubble images have hinted there is at least one surface feature that could be spotted even at the early approach. Now craters, if our current thinking is correct Ceres got a dusting of material on top, so larger (and more recent) craters might have a bright bottom. While I am at it, I am quite pessimistic on the outlook to find any satellite at Ceres for the same reason, any impact that might have sent material into orbit will be mostly be ice and might sublimate before it have time to coalescence, (which might be how the smaller satellites of Pluto came to be in that much colder environment.) There could be a very small rock in orbit, as for example one component of a binary asteroid that been captured and the small size made it escape detection in telescopic searches. |
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