NASA's Dawn spacecraft has entered an approach phase in which it will
continue to close in on Ceres, a Texas-sized dwarf planet never before visited
by a spacecraft. Dawn launched in 2007 and is scheduled to enter Ceres orbit in
March 2015.
Dawn recently emerged from solar conjunction, in which the spacecraft is on
the opposite side of the sun, limiting communication with antennas on Earth. Now
that Dawn can reliably communicate with Earth again, mission controllers have
programmed the maneuvers necessary for the next stage of the rendezvous, which
they label the Ceres approach phase. Dawn is currently 400,000 miles (640,000
kilometers) from Ceres, approaching it at around 450 miles per hour (725
kilometers per hour).
The spacecraft's arrival at Ceres will mark the first time that a spacecraft
has ever orbited two solar system targets. Dawn previously explored the
protoplanet Vesta for 14 months, from 2011 to 2012, capturing detailed images
and data about that body.
"Ceres is almost a complete mystery to us," said Christopher Russell,
principal investigator for the Dawn mission, based at the University of
California, Los Angeles. "Ceres, unlike Vesta, has no meteorites linked to it to
help reveal its secrets. All we can predict with confidence is that we will be
surprised."
The two planetary bodies are thought to be different in a few important ways.
Ceres may have formed later than Vesta, and with a cooler interior. Current
evidence suggests that Vesta only retained a small amount of water because it
formed earlier, when radioactive material was more abundant, which would have
produced more heat. Ceres, in contrast, has a thick ice mantle and may even have
an ocean beneath its icy crust.
Ceres, with an average diameter of 590 miles (950 kilometers), is also the
largest body in the asteroid belt, the strip of solar system real estate between
Mars and Jupiter. By comparison, Vesta has an average diameter of 326 miles (525
kilometers), and is the second most massive body in the belt.
The spacecraft uses ion propulsion to traverse space far more efficiently
than if it used chemical propulsion. In an ion propulsion engine, an electrical
charge is applied to xenon gas, and charged metal grids accelerate the xenon
particles out of the thruster. These particles push back on the thruster as they
exit, creating a reaction force that propels the spacecraft. Dawn has now
completed five years of accumulated thrust time, far more than any other
spacecraft.
"Orbiting both Vesta and Ceres would be truly impossible with conventional
propulsion. Thanks to ion propulsion, we're about to make history as the first
spaceship ever to orbit two unexplored alien worlds," said Marc Rayman, Dawn's
chief engineer and mission director, based at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
in Pasadena, California.
The next couple of months promise continually improving views of Ceres, prior
to Dawn's arrival. By the end of January, the spacecraft's images and other data
will be the best ever taken of the dwarf planet.
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