Rosetta's Rendezvous
On August 3rd, the Rosetta spacecraft's narrow angle camera captured
this stunning image of the nucleus of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.
After 10 years and 6.5 billion kilometers of travel along gravity assist
trajectories looping through interplanetary space, Rosetta had
approached to within 285 kilometers of its target. The curious
double-lobed shape of the nucleus is revealed in amazing detail at an
image resolution of 5.3 meters per pixel. About 4 kilometers across, the
comet nucleus is presently just over 400 million kilometers from Earth,
between the orbits of Jupiter and Mars. Now the first spacecraft to
achieve a delicate orbit around a comet, Rosetta will swing to within 50
kilometers and closer in the coming weeks, identifiying candidate sites
for landing its probe Philae later this year.
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