Rosetta's OSIRIS cameras reveal the nature of asteroid Steins
Close-up images of asteroid (2867) Steins, obtained with the OSIRIS cameras on Rosetta, have provided extensive new measurements of the physical properties of this main-belt asteroid. Steins is revealed to be a loosely-bound 'rubble pile' whose diamond shape has been honed by the YORP effect. This is the first time this effect has been seen in a main-belt asteroid. The results are reported by H. Uwe Keller and colleagues in the 8 January issue of Science magazine. Read more
Results from the Rosetta Encounter with Asteroid 2867 Steins
Last week, scientists on the OSIRIS camera team ESA's Rosetta mission published the peer-reviewed report on their observations of asteroid 2867 Steins. Steins is an E-type asteroid that was visited by Rosetta on September 5, 2008, with the closest approach taking place at 18:38:20 UTC at a distance of 803 kilometers. Rosetta's OSIRIS high-resolution camera system imaged about 60 percent of Steins' surface during the flyby. Unfortunately, due to stringent limits set on onboard fault protection software, the narrow-angle camera component of OSIRIS (the highest-resolution camera instrument on Rosetta) went into "safe mode" before closest approach, but the wide-angle camera returned photos throughout the encounter. The following description of the asteroid is based upon an article published in the January 8, 2010 issue of Science by H. Uwe Keller and numerous coauthors and on a related press release (in German). Read more
Sightseeing on its way to a comet, Europe's Rosetta spacecraft snapped pictures of an oddly shaped asteroid named Steins that turns out to be not a solid body, but a pile of rubble spun up, in part, by sunlight. The findings have implications for scientists and engineers studying ways to deflect an asteroid that might be on a collision course with Earth. Scientists studying the images used a mathematical technique to reconstruct the shape and spin rate of Steins, which is located in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. They determined that Steins, which is shaped like a cut diamond, has undergone a transformation, most likely from a phenomenon known as the YORP effect. Read more
Together with ESA colleague and orbital mechanics specialist Frank Budnik, Morley co-authored a scientific report in 2006 that studied the Rosetta anomaly during the 2005 swingby and listed possible causes. These range from tidal effects peculiar to the near-Earth environment, atmospheric drag, or the pressure of radiation emitted or reflected by the Earth, to much more extreme possibilities, such as dark matter, dark energy or previously unseen variations in General Relativity, one of the most fundamental and well-tested theories of modern physics. One American research team, led by ex-NASA scientist John Anderson, is even looking at the possibility that Earth's rotation may be distorting space-time - the fundamental fabric of our Universe - more than expected, thus affecting nearby spacecraft. But there is as yet no explanation how this could happen. Before even considering such exotic explanations, all the usual causes of spacecraft speed errors have been thoroughly eliminated by numerous investigations conducted over the years at both ESA and NASA. Software bugs, calculation errors, tracking uncertainties and other, much more mundane, causes have all been systematically eliminated or accounted for, leaving the speed anomaly maddeningly unexplained.
Rosetta's OSIRIS imaging system spotted an anticyclone over the South Pacific on the morning of 13 November. The images show the scene roughly as a human eye would see it. Cloud structures over the South Pacific, seen with the OSIRIS Imaging System's narrow-angle camera on 13 November at 06:48 CET. The clouds are part of an anticyclone that is visible close to the centre of the image below.
Rosetta makes final home call Europe's Rosetta spacecraft has made its third and final flyby of Earth, a manoeuvre designed to position the probe to chase down a comet in 2014. The spacecraft's whip around the planet will have given it the extra speed it needs to take it out to the rendezvous location near Jupiter.
Images and data taken just before closest approach were downloaded this morning, and they show the lights of North America in the night and a glowing Southern Hemisphere. Read more
This morning, mission controllers confirmed that ESA's comet chaser Rosetta had swung by Earth at 8:45 CET as planned, skimming past our planet to pick up a gravitational boost for an epic journey to rendezvous with comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in 2014. Rosetta passed over the ocean, just South of the Indonesian island of Java, at exactly 08:45:40 CET, at a speed of 13.34 km/s with respect to Earth an altitude of 2481 km. The swingby was pre-planned and fully automated, and the spacecraft was in direct communication with Earth at the time, via the ESa New Norcia Station.
Europe's Rosetta probe will make its third and final flyby of Earth on Friday as it seeks to position itself to chase down a comet in 2014. The spacecraft's whip around the planet will give it the extra speed it needs to take it out to the rendezvous location near Jupiter. Launched in 2004, Rosetta has already flown by Earth twice and Mars once.