U.S.
spacecraft reaches dwarf planet Ceres for 16-month study
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[March 09, 2015]
By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - A U.S.
space probe slipped into orbit around Ceres, a miniature planet beyond
Mars believed to be left over from the formation of the solar system,
NASA said on Friday.
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Launched in 2007, the Dawn spacecraft made a 14-month tour of the
asteroid Vesta before steering itself toward Ceres, the largest body
in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.
Dawn shifted its path to allow itself to be captured by Ceres’
gravity at 7:39 a.m. EST, becoming the first spacecraft to orbit a
dwarf planet.
"We feel exhilarated,” lead researcher Chris Russell at the
University of California, Los Angeles, said in a statement after
Dawn radioed back to Earth.
NASA's New Horizons probe is scheduled to fly by another dwarf
planet, Pluto, in the far reaches of the solar system later this
year. Like Ceres, Pluto was once considered a full-fledged planet,
but was reclassified after the discovery of similar bodies.
Dawn will spend about a month repositioning itself from its initial
orbit about 38,000 miles (61,000 km) above Ceres to the first survey
altitude of 2,730 miles (4,400 km).
By the time the mission ends in June 2016, Dawn will have flown as
low as 230 miles (375 km) above the surface.
Scientists already have a mystery to solve. Last month as Dawn
neared Ceres, it relayed images of startlingly bright spots on the
surface, which could be patches of subsurface ice exposed after an
asteroid or comet impact. They also could be deposits of salt or
other minerals.
“These spots were extremely surprising,” Dawn scientist Carol
Raymond of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, told reporters on
Monday.
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Scientists suspect Ceres may have had an underground ocean early in
its history that later froze. Europe’s Herschel telescope last year
detected water vapor around Ceres, a clue that impacting bodies may
periodically send plumes of watery material shooting into space.
Dawn will try to confirm those findings.
The mission, which is costing NASA about $473 million, is the first
to include stops at more than one extraterrestrial body.
Dawn is outfitted with an ion electric propulsion engine, which
requires far less fuel that traditional chemical engines.
The spacecraft was designed and built by Orbital ATK <OA.N>.
No new pictures of Ceres are expected until April when Dawn will be
able to see the sunlight side of its new home.
(Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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