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February 13, 2000 -- NASA's Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous
(NEAR) probe is now less than 1000
kilometers from 433 Eros. If
all goes well, NEAR will become the first spacecraft in history
to orbit an asteroid when it reaches the 21 mile long space rock
on Monday morning at 10:33 EST (7:33 PST).
On February 8, a 23-second engine burn accelerated NEAR from
18 mph to 22 mph relative to Eros, and shifted its target point
by 0.6 degrees. The burn was the second of two adjustments since
February 3 when another maneuver slowed the spacecraft's approach
speed from 43 mph to 18 mph. These were the last scheduled engine
firings before Monday's orbit insertion.
Above: On the right are pictures of
asteroid Eros in February 6, 2000. On the left are pictures from
an earlier NEAR flyby in December, 1998. All the photos were
snapped at a distance of about 4200 miles (6800 km). The differences
in Eros's appearance at the two times result from seasonal variations
in solar illumination. Last year NEAR approached from the north
when the asteroid was experiencing southern hemisphere summer
and thus the north pole was in shadow. Nearly 14 months later,
Eros is experiencing northern summer. The spacecraft is again
over northern latitudes, but because of the difference in illumination
it views a mostly sunlit, gibbous Eros.
Although most attention is focused on Monday morning
when NEAR goes into orbit, critical science observations will
begin about 11 hours earlier when the spacecraft passes directly
between the Sun and the asteroid. In this "high noon"
geometry, NEAR will see a part of the asteroid's surface with
no shadows. That's perfect for the spacecraft's Near-Infrared
Spectrometer (NIS), which measures the infrared spectrum
of reflected sunlight. NIS data will provide the main evidence
for the distribution and abundance of surface minerals like olivine
and pyroxine. (Olivine is a mineral that is abundant in Earth's
mantle; pyroxine is commonly found in lava flows.) The spectrometer
can't detect areas of Eros that are in shadow, so the high noon
data -- also called "zero phase" data, by scientists
-- are very important.
When
NEAR arrives at Eros on February 14, the asteroid will be experiencing
northern summer. At this time of the year on Eros (one year on
Eros equals 1.76 Earth-years) the Sun never sets over the north
pole. The south pole of the asteroid, where it is winter, is
dark. NEAR can't accumulate infrared spectra of the southern
regions until the seasons change. That will happen later this
year and NEAR is scheduled to make zero phase observations of
the southern side of Eros in October, 2000.
Left: Diagram shows the difference between "High
Noon" (or "zero phase") and NEAR's in orbit orientation.
At zero phase, NEAR lies directly between the Sun and asteroid
Eros. While in orbit, the Sun, Eros, and NEAR form a 90 degree
angle.
Just prior to Monday's orbit insertion is the only time during
the entire Eros rendezvous that NEAR will be able to collect
zero phase observations over the northern part of the asteroid.
Once NEAR is in orbit, the angle between the spacecraft, the
asteroid and the Sun will usually be near 90 degrees, which is
a better geometry for the spacecraft's primary
camera and other instruments.
Mission scientists expect the infrared observations just before
orbit insertion to yield the highest quality IR spectra of Eros's
northern regions. Similar data for the southern hemisphere will
be obtained on one day in October, 2000. Together with measurements
from the X-ray/Gamma-ray
Spectrometer and color imagery from the MSI,
these infrared data will reveal the connection between asteroids
and meteorites and possibly clarify how asteroids were formed
billions of years ago.
Because the spacecraft enters orbit just a few hours after the
critical NIS measurements, NEAR has a lot to do in a short time.
The sequence of commands has been loaded into the spacecraft
in advance and will be executed autonomously by on board computers.
The entire command script (except for the final rocket engine
firing) was tested successfully on the spacecraft in January
by the NEAR team. Hopefully, everything will go as smoothly on
Monday as it did last month.
For more information about the NEAR mission, see the recent SpaceScience.com
headline "Eros or Bust"
and the NEAR Mission Home Page
from Johns Hopkins University.
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Parents and Educators: Please visit
Thursday's Classroom
for lesson plans and activities related to this story. |
The NEAR (Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous) mission, a NASA
Discovery Program being conducted by the Johns Hopkins University
Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, MD, is the first mission
to orbit an asteroid. |