NASA released this new color composite image of Earth from space today (September 26, 2017). The OSIRIS-REx spacecraft – launched a year ago and bound for an encounter with asteroid Bennu in 2018 – acquired it during a close flyby of our planet on September 22. The spacecraft acquired this image just hours after it completed its Earth Gravity Assist at a range of approximately 106,000 miles (170,000 km). It used the MapCam camera on the craft, part of the OSIRIS-REx Camera Suite (OCAMS) operated by the University of Arizona.
The image spans the Pacific Ocean from Australia at the lower left, to Baja California and the southwestern United States in the upper right.
The dark vertical streaks at the top of the image are caused by short exposure times (less than three milliseconds), NASA said, adding:
Short exposure times are required for imaging an object as bright as Earth, but are not anticipated for an object as dark as the asteroid Bennu, which the camera was designed to image.
The OSIRIS-REx craft has the ultimate goal of obtaining a sample from asteroid Bennu and returning it to Earth in 2023.
Click here for more images from NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft.
On Friday I passed 17,000 km above Antarctica during #EarthGravityAssist. Now I'm more than 1 million km from Earth: https://t.co/rACre4nDe4 http://pic.twitter.com/isnaBKrco4
— NASA's OSIRIS-REx (@OSIRISREx) September 25, 2017
Bottom line: Earth portrait from OSIRIS-REx asteroid craft, made from images acquired during the Earth gravity assist on September 22, 2017.
from EarthSky http://ift.tt/2xDStPm
NASA released this new color composite image of Earth from space today (September 26, 2017). The OSIRIS-REx spacecraft – launched a year ago and bound for an encounter with asteroid Bennu in 2018 – acquired it during a close flyby of our planet on September 22. The spacecraft acquired this image just hours after it completed its Earth Gravity Assist at a range of approximately 106,000 miles (170,000 km). It used the MapCam camera on the craft, part of the OSIRIS-REx Camera Suite (OCAMS) operated by the University of Arizona.
The image spans the Pacific Ocean from Australia at the lower left, to Baja California and the southwestern United States in the upper right.
The dark vertical streaks at the top of the image are caused by short exposure times (less than three milliseconds), NASA said, adding:
Short exposure times are required for imaging an object as bright as Earth, but are not anticipated for an object as dark as the asteroid Bennu, which the camera was designed to image.
The OSIRIS-REx craft has the ultimate goal of obtaining a sample from asteroid Bennu and returning it to Earth in 2023.
Click here for more images from NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft.
On Friday I passed 17,000 km above Antarctica during #EarthGravityAssist. Now I'm more than 1 million km from Earth: https://t.co/rACre4nDe4 http://pic.twitter.com/isnaBKrco4
— NASA's OSIRIS-REx (@OSIRISREx) September 25, 2017
Bottom line: Earth portrait from OSIRIS-REx asteroid craft, made from images acquired during the Earth gravity assist on September 22, 2017.
from EarthSky http://ift.tt/2xDStPm
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