Credits: NASA/Goddard/SwRI/Johns Hopkins APL
The small dot moving against the
background of stars is the first view from NASA’s Lucy spacecraft of the main
belt asteroid Dinkinesh, the first of 10 asteroids that the spacecraft will
visit on its 12-year voyage of discovery. Lucy captured these two images on
Sept. 2 and 5, 2023. On the left, the image blinks between these first two
images of Dinkinesh. On the right, the asteroid is circled to aid the eye.
Lucy took these images while it was 14
million miles (23 million km) away from the asteroid, which is only about a
half-mile wide (1 km). Over the next two months, Lucy will continue toward
Dinkinesh until its closest approach of 265 miles (425 km) on Nov. 1, 2023. The
Lucy team will use this encounter as an opportunity to test out spacecraft
systems and procedures, focusing on the spacecraft’s terminal tracking system,
designed to keep the asteroid within the instruments’ fields of view as the
spacecraft flies by at 10,000 mph (4.5 km/s). Lucy will continue to image the
asteroid over the next months as part of its optical navigation program, which
uses the asteroid’s apparent position against the star background to determine
the relative position of Lucy and Dinkinesh to ensure an accurate flyby.
Dinkinesh will remain an unresolved point of light during the long approach and
won't start to show surface detail until the day of the encounter.
The brightest star in this field of view
is HD 34258, a 7.6 magnitude star in the constellation Auriga that is too dim
to be seen by the naked eye from Earth. At this distance, Dinkinesh is only 19
magnitude, about 150,000 times fainter than that star. Celestial north is to
the right of the frame, which is about 74,500 miles across (120,000 km). The
observations were made by Lucy’s high-resolution camera, the L’LORRI instrument
– short for Lucy LOng Range Reconnaissance Imager – provided by the Johns Hopkins
Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland.
Lucy’s principal investigator, Hal
Levison, is based out of the Boulder, Colorado, branch of Southwest Research
Institute, headquartered in San Antonio, Texas. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight
Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, provides overall mission management, systems
engineering, and safety and mission assurance. Lockheed Martin Space in
Littleton, Colorado, built the spacecraft. Lucy is the 13th mission in NASA’s
Discovery Program. NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama,
manages the Discovery Program for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA
Headquarters in Washington.
For more information about NASA’s Lucy
mission, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/lucy
Written by Katherine Kretke Southwest Research Institute
Source: NASA’s Lucy Spacecraft Captures its
1st Images of Asteroid Dinkinesh | NASA
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