The faces of Vesta
The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope snapped these images of the asteroid Vesta in preparation for the Dawn spacecraft's visit in 2011.
Each of the four Hubble images captures views of Vesta during its 5.34-hour rotation period. Hubble's sharp "eye" can see features as small as about 40 kilometers across in these images. Vesta was 211 kilometers from Earth when Hubble made the observations.
The images show the difference in brightness and colour on the asteroid's surface. These characteristics hint at the large-scale features that the Dawn spacecraft will see when it visits the potato-shaped asteroid.
Vesta is somewhat like our Moon, with ancient lava beds (the dark patches) and powdery debris, the pulverized remains of impacts (the orange-coloured areas). The flattened area on one end of Vesta, visible in the top row of images, is a giant impact crater formed by a collision billions of years ago. The crater is 460 kilometers across, which is close to Vesta's roughly 530-kilometer diameter. Vesta is about the size of Arizona.
Astronomers used the images, taken with Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3, to better determine the orientation of Vesta's spin axis.
This will help scientists refine the Dawn spacecraft's orbit around the asteroid. Dawn will orbit the rocky object for a year, beginning in July 2011. The spacecraft then will travel to the dwarf planet Ceres, arriving in 2015.
Vesta is one of the largest of a reservoir of about 100,000 asteroids, the leftover material from the formation of our solar system's planets 4.6 billion years ago.
Hubble has kept its "eye" on Vesta for more than 15 years, beginning in 1994. Hubble images of Vesta in 1997 helped astronomers discover the asteroid's immense impact crater. Astronomers combined views of Vesta in near-ultraviolet and blue light to construct these images. The images were taken on 28 Feb. 2010.
Credit:About the Image
About the Object
Name: | Vesta |
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Type: | Solar System : Interplanetary Body : Asteroid |
Category: | Solar System |
Colours & filters
Band | Wavelength | Telescope |
---|---|---|
Ultraviolet Near-UV | 373 nm |
Hubble Space Telescope
WFC3 |
Optical B | 469 nm |
Hubble Space Telescope
WFC3 |