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Mercury Flyby 1
ugordan
post Jan 11 2008, 05:23 PM
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Interesting, it's just starting to show irregularities in brightness of the crescent, i.e. hints that it's not a smooth globe.

EDIT: I see Bjorn beat me to it smile.gif


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volcanopele
post Jan 11 2008, 05:50 PM
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LOL, looks like we all had the same idea. So far I could only identify one surface feature when comparing the image to the Mariner 10 basemaps:
Attached thumbnail(s)
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tedstryk
post Jan 11 2008, 06:08 PM
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I processed both of them now.

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climber
post Jan 11 2008, 07:59 PM
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Not my idea actualy, but I hope Nasa will name a yet to be discovered feature on Mercury after Hillary (& Tenzing).
BTW, did you know that when Neil Armstrong first set foot on the Moon, it was on Hillary's 50th birthday !


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tedstryk
post Jan 11 2008, 09:13 PM
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Looks like our Poet Laureate has given voice to our first views from the vicinity of Mercury since the 1970s.

http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/poem.html


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ustrax
post Jan 11 2008, 09:24 PM
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HOO-RAH!!! biggrin.gif


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n1ckdrake
post Jan 11 2008, 09:44 PM
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Beautiful poem. Congrats Stu!
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Stu
post Jan 11 2008, 09:55 PM
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Thanks! smile.gif I'm almost embarrassingly chuffed that they used it. I will never cease to be amazed by how generous and enthusiastic the people behind these multi-gazillion dollar/pound/euro missions are, how they take time from their busy schedules to answer emails from space cadets like me, and put things like that poem up on their official websites. I guess I'm still just that space mad kid who sat in a corner of the library at school reading the science books during breaktimes, when everyone else was outside kicking a ball around... laugh.gif


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belleraphon1
post Jan 12 2008, 12:10 AM
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Stu.... very nice...

You give value to all of us who spent their HS lunch hours buried in books and dreaming of climbing the worldtree.

Keep it up, sir.

Craig
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nprev
post Jan 12 2008, 01:04 AM
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Let me add my congratulations, Stu; that's just outstanding, we're all extremely proud of you!!! smile.gif


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PDP8E
post Jan 12 2008, 02:11 AM
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wow...ted and bjorn and others nice work.

I just finished processing the 2nd crecent shot with an adaptive filter I built a few weeks ago.

I think you can see he craters and hills especially near the terminator...enjoy!

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ElkGroveDan
post Jan 12 2008, 03:00 AM
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QUOTE (belleraphon1 @ Jan 11 2008, 04:10 PM) *
You give value to all of us who spent their HS lunch hours buried in books


What? You mean there were others? Well that's a comfort.


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tedstryk
post Jan 12 2008, 03:38 AM
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I can't join in there...I usually spent those hours in the office, off somewhere in the school getting in trouble, or not at school really getting in trouble. rolleyes.gif


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alan
post Jan 12 2008, 06:11 AM
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Jumping ahead somewhat, looking at the animation of MESSENGER's trajectory I count three obits of Mercury between flybys one and two. Does that means the flyby two will see the other side?
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elakdawalla
post Jan 12 2008, 06:13 AM
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Yup, flyby two is almost exactly 1.5 solar days after flyby one, so we see almost exactly the opposite hemisphere. See the little gray sidebar titled "MESSENGER's Mercury encounters" near the top of my flyby preview story for the longitudes that will be sunlit.

--Emily


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