The Dawn spacecraft has delivered a glimpse of Ceres, the largest body in the
main asteroid belt, in a new image taken 740,000 miles (1.2 million kilometers)
from the dwarf planet. This is Dawn's best image yet of Ceres as the spacecraft
makes its way toward this unexplored world.
"Now, finally, we have a spacecraft on the verge of unveiling this
mysterious, alien world. Soon it will reveal myriad secrets Ceres has held since
the dawn of the solar system," said Marc Rayman, of NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, California, chief engineer and mission director of the
Dawn mission.
Dawn will be captured into Ceres' orbit in March, marking the first visit to
a dwarf planet by a spacecraft. To date, the best images of Ceres come from the
Hubble Space Telescope. In early 2015, however, Dawn will begin delivering
images at much higher resolution.
Since launching in 2007, Dawn has already visited Vesta, a giant protoplanet
currently located 104 million miles (168 million kilometers) away from Ceres.
The distance between Vesta and Ceres is greater than the distance between the
Earth and the sun. During its 14 months in orbit around Vesta, the spacecraft
delivered unprecedented scientific insights, including images of its cratered
surface and important clues about its geological history. Vesta and Ceres are
the two most massive bodies in the main asteroid belt.
The nine-pixel-wide image of Ceres released today serves as a final
calibration of the science camera that is necessary before Dawn gets to Ceres.
The dwarf planet appears approximately as bright as Venus sometimes appears from
Earth. Ceres has an average diameter of about 590 miles (950 kilometers).
Dawn begins its approach phase toward Ceres on December 26.
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