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Deep
Impact Photographs Tempel 1
04.28.05
Sixty-nine days before it gets up-close-and-personal with a comet, NASA's Deep
Impact spacecraft successfully photographed its quarry, comet Tempel
1, at a distance of 39.7 million miles.
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The image, the first of many
comet portraits it will take over the next 10
weeks, will aid Deep Impact's navigators, engineers
and scientists as they plot their final trajectory
toward an Independence Day encounter."
It is great to get a first glimpse
at the comet from our spacecraft," said Deep Impact
principal investigator, Dr. Michael A'Hearn of
the University of Maryland, College Park, MD. " With
daily observations beginning in May, Tempel 1
will become noticeably more impressive as we
continue to close the gap between spacecraft
and comet. What is now little more than a few
pixels across will evolve by July 4 into the
best, most detaile((d.images)) of a comet ever taken," he
added.
The ball of dirty ice and rock was detected
on April 25 by Deep Impact's Medium Resolution
Instrument on the very first attempt. While making
the detection, the spacecraft's camera saw stars
as dim as 11th visual magnitude, more than 100
times dimmer than a human can see on a clear
night.
"This is the first of literally thousands of
../../../images we will take of Tempel 1 for
both science and navigational purposes," said deputy program manager
Keyur Patel at
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA. "Our goal is to impact
a 39 inch long spacecraft into about a 4 mile wide comet that is bearing
down on it at 6.3
miles per second, while both are 83 million miles away from Earth. Finding
the
comet as early and as far away as we did is a definite aid to our navigation."
The Deep Impact spacecraft has four data collectors
to observe the effects of the
collision - a camera and infrared spectrometer comprise the High Resolution
Instrument,
a Medium Resolution Instrument, and a duplicate of that camera on the
impactor (called
the Impactor Targeting Sensor-ITS) that will record the vehicle's final
moments before
it is run over by comet Tempel 1 at a speed of about 23,000 miles per
hour.
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