NetMoonAsteroids - Ida & Dactyl


Asteroid - Ida & DactylPUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICEJET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGYNATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF.
PHOTO CAPTION GALILEO
SEPT. 22, 1993 P-42964 TOP
This view of the asteroid 243 Ida is a mosaic of five image
frames acquired by the Galileo spacecraft's solid-state
imaging system at ranges of 3,057 to 3,821 kilometers (1,900
to 2,375 miles) on August 28, 1993, about 3-1/2 minutes
before the spacecraft made its closest approach to the asteroid.
Galileo flew about 2,400 kilometers (1,500 miles) from Ida
at a relative velocity of 12.4 km/sec (28,000 mph). Asteroid
and spacecraft were 441 million kilometers (274 million miles) from the Sun.
Ida is the second asteroid ever encountered by a spacecraft.
It appears to be about 52 kilometers (32 miles) in length,
more than twice as large as Gaspra, the first asteroid observed
by Galileo in October 1991. Ida is an irregularly shaped
asteroid placed by scientists in the S class (believed to be
like stony or stony iron meteorites). It is a member of the
Koronis family, presumed fragments left from the breakup of
a precursor asteroid in a catastrophic collision. This view
shows numerous craters, including many degraded craters larger
than any seen on Gaspra. The extensive cratering seems to dispel
theories about Ida's surface being geologically youthful. This
view also seems to rule out the idea that Ida is a double body.
The south pole is believed to be in the dark side near the
middle of the asteroid.
The camera's clear filter was used to produce this extremely
sharp picture. Spatial resolution is 31 to 38 meters (roughly
100 feet) per pixel. A 30-frame mosaic was taken to assure
capturing Ida; its position was somewhat uncertain before the
Galileo encounter. Galileo shuttered and recorded a total of
150 images in order to capture Ida 21 different times during
a five hour period (about one rotation of the asteroid).
Color filters were used at many of these times to allow
reconstruction of color images. Playback to Earth of the
remaining images is planned for April through June 1994.
The Galileo project, whose primary mission is the
exploration of the Jupiter system in 1995-97, is managed for
NASA's Office of Space Science by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

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