Stardust Accomplishes Successful Asteroid Flyby
11/2/02
NASA's Stardust spacecraft successfully completed a close flyby of asteroid Annefrank early today as an opportunity for a full dress rehearsal of procedures the
spacecraft will use during its Jan. 2, 2004, encounter with it primary science target, comet Wild 2.

Stardust spacecraft
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Annefrank is about 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) across. Stardust passed within about 3,300 kilometers (2,050 miles) of the asteroid at 04:50 today, Universal Time
(8:50 p.m. Nov. 1, Pacific Standard Time). Radio signals confirming the basic health of the spacecraft after the flyby were received about 30 minutes later via an
antenna at the Canberra, Australia, complex of NASA's Deep Space Network, said Thomas Duxbury, project manager for Stardust at JPL.
Stardust visually tracked the asteroid for 30 minutes as it flew by at a relative speed of about 7 kilometers (4 miles) per second, a major goal of this test
opportunity. Although no dust was anticipated near the asteroid, the spacecraft's dust instruments were in use as they will be at Wild 2: the dust collector was
open and the dust counter and dust mass spectrometer were turned on.
../../../images and information from the flyby period are being transmitted from the spacecraft today and through the coming week. Stardust's scientists and engineers are
analyzing the data to maximize the probability of success during the 2004 encounter with comet Wild 2.
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