NASA Craft To Leave Vesta Heads For Dwarf Planet Ceres
DevotedSkeptic writes "NASA's Dawn probe is gearing up to depart the giant asteroid Vesta next week and begin the long trek to the dwarf planet Ceres, the largest object in the asteroid belt. The Dawn spacecraft is slated to leave Vesta on the night of Sept. 4 (early morning Sept. 5 EDT), ending a 14-month stay at the 330-mile-wide (530 kilometers) body. The journey to Ceres should take roughly 2.5 years, with Dawn reaching the dwarf planet in early 2015, researchers said. 'Thrust is engaged, and we are now climbing away from Vesta atop a blue-green pillar of xenon ions,' Dawn chief engineer and mission director Marc Rayman, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., said in a statement. 'We are feeling somewhat wistful about concluding a fantastically productive and exciting exploration of Vesta, but now have our sights set on dwarf planet Ceres.'"
We're all counting on you...
Seriously though, Ceres is an awesome target and much more exciting than Vesta. Vesta is a rock. Ceres is half water ice by volume, in low g. Obviously some serious upside potentials there. A vastly superior target to Mars, or just about anywhere else in the solar system.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
Here's a cool video generated from pictures taken by the probe as it orbited the asteroid.
Mada mada dane.
When posting NASA news, it's always best to go to NASA itself. Avoiding ad cluttered sites will help reduce excess traffic on our limited bandwidth.
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
From further down in that link you posted, "it appears to have a surface of basaltic rock -- frozen lava -- which oozed out of the asteroid's presumably hot interior shortly after its formation 4.5 billion years ago, and has remained largely intact ever since." So no volcanic activity anymore, though meteorites believed to originate from Vesta are believed to have been formed in the impact that produced the Rheasilivia crater, which possibly ejected material as deep as the mantle.
"FDA staff reviewers expressed concern about the number of patients who were left out of the study because they died."
How can an asteroid of only 330 mile wide have volcano that spewed out lava ?
Lot's of radioactive Aluminum-26, which melted all sorts of things in the very early solar system. (Vesta is thought to be near-primordial.)