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Posts Tagged ‘ceres’

Ceres Probe Returns Harvest of Data, But Mysteries Remain

Monday, October 5th, 2015

October 5, 2015

This map-projected view of Ceres was created from images taken by NASA's Dawn spacecraft during its high-altitude mapping orbit, in August and September, 2015. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/MPS/DLR/IDA

This map-projected view of Ceres was made from images taken by NASA’s Dawn spacecraft during its high-altitude mapping orbit in August and September of 2015.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/MPS/DLR/IDA

Those bright spots are still a bit mysterious. Last week, the United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) released more data from the dwarf planet Ceres (SIHR eez) taken by the probe Dawn. These data included more pictures and three-dimensional maps of Ceres’ surface.

In addition to being a dwarf planet, Ceres is the largest of the many asteroids found between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, in a region known as the Main Belt. Ceres accounts for more than one-fourth of the total mass (amount of matter) of the Main Belt asteroids. Ceres’ shape resembles a slightly squashed sphere with a widest diameter of 605 miles (975 kilometers) and a shortest diameter of 565 miles (909 kilometers). It has a fairly smooth, rocky surface and little or no atmosphere. The dwarf planet orbits the sun every 4.6 Earth years at an average distance of about 257 million miles (414 million kilometers), and it takes its name from the Roman goddess of agriculture and the harvest.

NASA launched Dawn on September 27, 2007, just over 8 years ago. The probe studied another large asteroid in the Main Belt called Vesta before moving on to Ceres. Dawn has gone into orbit around the dwarf planet and has extensively mapped and photographed the surface. Although Ceres is pockmarked with craters like many small objects in the solar system, it does possess some interesting features. Scientists think that its rocky exterior covers a thick layer of water-ice. Though the asteroid is relatively smooth, a large, cone-shaped mountain rises four miles (six kilometers) from the surface.

And finally, there are those strange bright spots. Mostly located in the Occator (oh KAH tor) crater, these spots are far brighter than the rest of Ceres’ surface. Scientists think the spots are salt deposits, but they aren’t yet sure how they formed. In the coming months, Dawn will descend to just 230 miles (375 kilometers) above the dwarf planet. With the information gathered by this close orbit, the probe may be able to help scientists solve Ceres’ riddles.

Other World Book articles

  • Exploring the Suburban Solar System (a Special report)
  • Closing in on Ceres (a Behind the headline, January 21, 2015)

Tags: ceres, dawn, space probe
Posted in Current Events, Science, Space | Comments Off

Closing In on Ceres

Wednesday, January 21st, 2015

January 21, 2015

The photos are fuzzy, but astronomers eagerly studying the first images of the dwarf planet Ceres taken by NASA’s Dawn spacecraft think they may be seeing craters. Astronomers wouldn’t be surprised to learn that Ceres, like many planets and moons in the solar system, has been whacked by space rocks during its billion-year history. Still, the images are the clearest yet of Ceres–three times better than the previous best, which were taken by the Hubble Space Telescope. The new images were taken when Dawn was about 238,000 miles (383,000 kilometers) away from Ceres, about the distance between Earth and the moon. Over the next six weeks, as Dawn speeds closer and closer, astronomers will be able to determine if the surface of Ceres really is dotted by craters. And if all goes well, that finding will be only the first of many discoveries about this largely mysterious object. Astronomers expect to learn much more, especially after Dawn enters orbit around Ceres on March 6. Launched in 2007, Dawn was designed to study both Ceres and Vesta, the third-largest asteroid in the solar system.

The dwarf planet Ceres appears in both visible and infrared light in some of the first images of Ceres taken by the Dawn spacecraft. The craft was 238,000 miles (383,000 kilometers) away at the time. In the infrared image, which is really a temperature map of Ceres, white is warmer and red is colder. (NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/ASI/INAF)

Ceres, which is shaped like a slightly squashed sphere, is about 590 miles (950 kilometers) in diameter. It is so large that it accounts for more than one-fourth of the total mass (amount of matter) of all of the millions of asteroids in the Main Belt, a region between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. In fact, Ceres has enough mass to be considered a dwarf planet.

On entering obit around Ceres, Dawn will become the first spacecraft to circle two deep-space objects. The craft reached Vesta for a one-year study in 2011. While on this mission, Dawn revealed that Vesta has three layers–an inner core, middle layer called the mantle, and an outer crust. Scientists think both Ceres and Vesta probably formed early in the solar system’s history from many smaller bodies that collided and stuck together, a process called accretion. However, the gravitational pull of Jupiter likely prevented the two from combining with other objects and growing to the size of a planet.

Additional World Book articles:

  • Space exploration
  • Exploring the Suburban Solar System (a special report)

 

 

Tags: asteroid, ceres, dawn spacecraft, dwarf planet, nasa, vesta
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Our New Planet Is WAY Out There!

Friday, March 28th, 2014

March 28, 2014

A probable dwarf planet that orbits much farther from the sun than any other known object has been discovered by American astronomers Chad Trujillo and Scott Sheppard. The little planet is so far away that its orbit takes it 15 times as far from the sun as the orbit of Neptune, the most distant major planet in the solar system. The astronomers first sighted the object, designated 2012 VP113, or VP for short, using the Dark Energy Camera mounted on the 4-meter Blanco telescope in Chile. However, to confirm the shape of the object’s orbit around the sun, the astronomers needed to watch the object for many months. The would-be dwarf planet VP is the second such object found orbiting the sun at such a vast distance. The first, named Sedna, was discovered in 2003 by a team that included Trujillo. VP appears to be about 280 miles (450 kilometers) across, about half the size of Sedna and the most commonly known dwarf planet, Pluto. Trujillo and Sheppard nicknamed the new dwarf planet Biden, for United States Vice President Joe Biden.

The distance from Earth to the sun is, on average, about 93 million miles (150 million kilometers). This distance is called an astronomical unit or AU. Neptune is about 30 AU from the sun. The orbit of Sedna is a stretched out oval that carries it as far as 1,000 AU from the sun. However, Sedna also comes to within 76 AU of the sun at its closest approach. The orbit of VP is more circular. For this reason, VP doesn’t stray as far as Sedna, only about 450 AU. On the other hand, VP never gets closer than 80 AU to the sun at its closest approach, farther than any other solar system body known.

Dwarf planets Ceres, Eris, Haumea, Makemake, and Pluto and their moons, compared with Earth and its moon. All of these dwarf planets are smaller than the moon. (©UCAR/University of Michigan)

The area to which Pluto and several other dwarf planets belong is called the Kuiper belt. It is the region beyond Neptune and includes millions of icy bodies. Far beyond the Kuiper belt is a region called the Oort cloud, an area thought to be filled with millions of comets. Both Sedna and VP orbit between the Kuiper belt and the Oort cloud. Many astronomers believed this area was empty. The discovery of Sedna and now VP puts that idea into question.

The discovery offers new information about how the solar system was formed. How did such large objects assume orbits so far from the sun? How many are there yet to be found? One interesting conclusion suggested by astronomers studying the new data is that the orbits of Sedna and VP may be influenced by a large, yet undiscovered planet.

Additional World Book articles:

  • Ceres
  • Eris
  • Planet (the dwarf planets)
  • Exploring the Suburban Solar System (a Special Report)
  • Astronomy (2004) (a Back in Time article)
  • Astronomy (2006) (a Back in Time article)

 

Tags: astronomy, biden, ceres, chad trujillo, dwarf planet, eris, kuiper belt, neptune, oort cloud, planet, pluto, scott sheppard, sedna, solar system
Posted in Current Events, Space, Technology | Comments Off

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