Planetary News: Earth (2005)
MESSENGER Snaps Earth-Moon Image in Approach to First Flyby
By Emily Lakdawalla
2 June 2005
The MESSENGER spacecraft still has a long way to go before
it finally settles into orbit around Mercury in March of 2011, but scientists
are taking advantage of every milestone in the mission to warm up the
spacecraft's science instruments. As MESSENGER began its approach for
its August 2 flyby of Earth, its cameras have snapped their first images.
The images clearly show a cloudy Earth -- and, to scientists' surprise,
the Moon as well.
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The Earth and Moon as seen by MESSENGER
This image was cropped from the MESSENGER Dual Imaging System
(MDIS) full frame of the Earth and Moon captured on May 11, 2005.
MESSENGER was about 29.6 million kilometers (18.4 million miles)
from Earth at the time that the photo was taken, approaching its
August 2 flyby. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied
Physics Laborator MESSENGER Snaps Earth-Moon Image in Approach to First Flyby - Planetary News | The Planetary Societyy/Carnegie Institution of Washington |
"It's nice to actually have data finally, after all this time,"
said Louise Prockter, who is the lead scientist for the MESSENGER Dual
Imaging System (MDIS) instrument at the Applied Physics Laboratory.
“These were our first 'real' images, and they're
only going to get better as MESSENGER moves closer to Earth."
Imaging the Moon in the same picture was a pleasant surprise for the
imaging team. Prockter explained that images taken from this distance
-- 29.6 million kilometers (18.4 million miles) -- were not intended
to show a lot of detail on the Earth. Instead, the images "were
just trying to support one of the other instruments; we were just trying
to look at the earth and find out whether [instrument] boresights overlapped."
Consequently, MDIS scientists had given little thought to what else
MDIS might pick up in the wide image frame. "When we got the images
back, we asked 'what's that speck over there?' and it turned out to
be the Moon! It didn't occur to anybody to look for it until then."
Each of MESSENGER's planetary flybys -- Earth on August 2 of this year,
followed by two of Venus on October 24, 2006 and June 6, 2007 -- will
be valuable for the science team to prepare for the first Mercury flyby
on January 15, 2008. But there are challenges to the Earth and Venus
flybys, because "MESSENGER was never designed to work at the Earth
[distance from the Sun], it was designed to work at Mercury where it's
much brighter," Prockter said. The spacecraft has many engineering
features designed to dissipate the heat of a Sun that is 11 times brighter
what the Earth sees. For example, MESSENGER has a Sun shield that will
always be pointed at the Sun to protect the spacecraft from excessive
solar heating.
Consequently, Prockter explained, at Earth's distance from the Sun,
"We are flying the spacecraft backwards to warm it up. We also
have some power issues. We don't have enough power to do everything
we'd like to do [at Earth], but we might as well take some images and
other data while we're here." Even if the images and data are not
yet of Mercury, Prockter is excited. "Now it's under way, and I'm
starting to do planning and real sequencing. It's really starting to
get interesting!"
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