Latest Rosetta images of Comet 67P/C-G

Wonderful new images of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko from Rosetta “ESA’s comet chaser” have been released in the past week or so:

OSIRIS catches activity in the act –

The comet’s activity has been significantly increasing over the last weeks and months. As the comet moves closer to the Sun along its orbit, its nucleus gets warmer and warmer. Frozen gases sublimate from its surface, carrying dust particles with it and enshrouding the nucleus in a dense coma. With only four months to go until perihelion – the closest point to the Sun – this process is well underway, with pronounced dust jets seen at all times on the comet’s day side.

ESA_Rosetta_OSIRIS_WAC_20150312[1]Rosetta’s OSIRIS wide-angle camera captures the moment a jet bursts
into 
action. The first image was captured at 07:13 CET on 12 March
2015, the  
second two minutes later.
Credits: ESA/Rosetta/MPS for OSIRIS Team 

The two images released today show the remarkable onset of such a jet for the first time. They were taken on 12 March from a distance of 75 kilometres. In the first image, obtained at 07:13 CET, several rays of dust jets frame the upper, illuminated side of the comet. The dark underside shows no such features. Two minutes later, the picture has changed: a spectacular new jet has emerged on the dark side, hurtling dust into space and displaying a clearly discernable fine structure.

“This was a chance discovery,” says OSIRIS principal investigator Holger Sierks from the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research (MPS) in Germany. “No one has ever witnessed the wake-up of a dust jet before. It is impossible to plan such an image.”

Continue…

CometWatch 15 April  –

Today’s CometWatch entry is a single frame NAVCAM image obtained on 15 April, from a distance of 170 km from the centre of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. At this distance, the resolution is 14.5 m/pixel; the image has been cropped to 11.4 km (the original frame, provided at the end of the post, measures 14.8 km across).

ESA_Rosetta_NavCam_20150415_LR[1]

Continue..

CometWatch 15 April – 4 hours later –

Today’s CometWatch entry is another single frame NAVCAM image taken on 15 April, almost four hours after the one that was published last Friday. The new picture was obtained at about 165 km from the centre of Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, where the resolution of NAVCAM is 14 m/pixel. The image has been cropped and measures 10.4 km (the original frame, provided at the end of the post, measures 14.4 km across).

ESA_Rosetta_NavCam_20150415_LR1[1]

Continue…

“Crescent comet” – CometWatch 15 and 16 April –

The image [below] was captured on 15 April 2015 by Rosetta’s Navigation camera from a distance of 162 km from the comet centre. The resolution is 14 m/pixel and the image measures 14 km across. It has been processed to bring out the incredible detail of the comet’s activity streaming away from the nucleus.

ESA_Rosetta_NavCam_20150415T1155_LR-1024x1024[1]

 

The previous two CometWatch entries were also acquired on 15 April and today’s image fits into the sequence nicely, captured just before midday spacecraft time, a little over two hours after Monday’s entry.

Under the viewing conditions at this time, the comet appears largely in shadow, with the ‘underside’ of the comet’s large lobe beautifully silhouetted against the background glow of activity that surrounds the nucleus.

Continue…

Rosetta update: Two close flybys of an increasingly active comet – The Planetary Society –  Emily Lakdawalla gives a tour of the new images.

20150421_Comet_activity_31_January_25_March_2015_f840[1]

 

In the two months since I last checked up on the Rosetta mission, the comet has heated up, displaying more and more jet activity. Perihelion is now only four months away, and the pictures are just getting more and more dramatic with time.

Continue…

TMRO Space Pods: Mice & seeds on the ISS, India’s human spaceflight program, Our Milky Way home

More Space Pod short video reports from TMRO.tv:

Mousetronauts and Growing Seeds in Microgravity – Space Pod 04/22/15 – “Lisa Stojanovski discusses the different experiments that will performed on mice at the International Space Station as well as plant growth experiments.”

India’s Human Spaceflight Program – Space Pod 04/21/15 – “Michael Clark talks about India’s human spaceflight program and the rockets that will enable them.”

 

Living in the Galactic ‘Burbs – Space Pod 04/20/15 – “Ariel Waldman chats about our home in the Milky Way galaxy and displays her #spacehipster pride in explaining why the Spitzer Space Telescope is awesome.”

ESO: First measurement of an exoplanet’s visible light spectrum

A new report from ESO (European Southern Observatory):

First Exoplanet Visible Light Spectrum
New technique paints promising picture for future

Astronomers using the HARPS planet-hunting machine at ESO’s La Silla Observatory in Chile have made the first-ever direct detection of the spectrum of visible light reflected off an exoplanet. These observations also revealed new properties of this famous object, the first exoplanet ever discovered around a normal star: 51 Pegasi b. The result promises an exciting future for this technique, particularly with the advent of next generation instruments, such as ESPRESSO, on the VLT, and future telescopes, such as the E-ELT.

eso1517a_600x377

This artist’s view shows the hot Jupiter exoplanet 51 Pegasi b, sometimes referred to as Bellerophon, which orbits a star about 50 light-years from Earth in the northern constellation of Pegasus (The Winged Horse). This was the first exoplanet around a normal star to be found in 1995. Twenty years later this object was also the first exoplanet to be be directly detected spectroscopically in visible light. Credit: ESO/M. Kornmesser/Nick Risinger (skysurvey.org)

The exoplanet 51 Pegasi b [1] lies some 50 light-years from Earth in the constellation of Pegasus. It was discovered in 1995 and will forever be remembered as the first confirmed exoplanet to be found orbiting an ordinary star like the Sun [2]. It is also regarded as the archetypal hot Jupiter — a class of planets now known to be relatively commonplace, which are similar in size and mass to Jupiter, but orbit much closer to their parent stars.

Since that landmark discovery, more than 1900 exoplanets in 1200 planetary systems have been confirmed, but, in the year of the twentieth anniversary of its discovery, 51 Pegasi b returns to the ring once more to provide another advance in exoplanet studies.

The team that made this new detection was led by Jorge Martins from the Instituto de Astrofísica e Ciências do Espaço (IA) and the Universidade do Porto, Portugal, who is currently a PhD student at ESO in Chile. They used the HARPS instrument on the ESO 3.6-metre telescope at the La Silla Observatory in Chile.

Currently, the most widely used method to examine an exoplanet’s atmosphere is to observe the host star’s spectrum as it is filtered through the planet’s atmosphere during transit — a technique known as transmission spectroscopy. An alternative approach is to observe the system when the star passes in front of the planet, which primarily provides information about the exoplanet’s temperature.

The new technique does not depend on finding a planetary transit, and so can potentially be used to study many more exoplanets. It allows the planetary spectrum to be directly detected in visible light, which means that different characteristics of the planet that are inaccessible to other techniques can be inferred.

The host star’s spectrum is used as a template to guide a search for a similar signature of light that is expected to be reflected off the planet as it describes its orbit. This is an exceedingly difficult task as planets are incredibly dim in comparison to their dazzling parent stars.

The signal from the planet is also easily swamped by other tiny effects and sources of noise [3]. In the face of such adversity, the success of the technique when applied to the HARPS data collected on 51 Pegasi b provides an extremely valuable proof of concept.

Jorge Martins explains: “This type of detection technique is of great scientific importance, as it allows us to measure the planet’s real mass and orbital inclination, which is essential to more fully understand the system. It also allows us to estimate the planet’s reflectivity, or albedo, which can be used to infer the composition of both the planet’s surface and atmosphere.”

51 Pegasi b was found to have a mass about half that of Jupiter’s and an orbit with an inclination of about nine degrees to the direction to the Earth [4]. The planet also seems to be larger than Jupiter in diameter and to be highly reflective. These are typical properties for a hot Jupiter that is very close to its parent star and exposed to intense starlight.

HARPS was essential to the team’s work, but the fact that the result was obtained using the ESO 3.6-metre telescope, which has a limited range of application with this technique, is exciting news for astronomers. Existing equipment like this will be surpassed by much more advanced instruments on larger telescopes, such as ESO’s Very Large Telescope and the future European Extremely Large Telescope [5].

We are now eagerly awaiting first light of the ESPRESSO spectrograph on the VLT so that we can do more detailed studies of this and other planetary systems,” concludes Nuno Santos, of the IA and Universidade do Porto, who is a co-author of the new paper.

Here is the paper: Evidence for a spectroscopic direct detection of reflected light from 51 Peg b, J. H. C. Martins et al, Astronomy & Astrophysics, April 2015 (pdf).

The Private Space Webseries

The Private Space project, founded by Tamir ElSahy, aims to create a series of documentary films that explore

the intersections of government, entrepreneurs, and citizen scientists in space commercialization across the U.S.

The project recently opened a crowd-funding campaign to complete at least 9 more episodes: The Private Space Webseries by Tamir ElSahy — Kickstarter –

Three initial episodes are available at LifeAssembled Studios – YouTube.  The first “features an interview with California State Sen. Steve Knight, the lead author of California’s Space Flight Liability and Immunity Act“.

The second video features an interview with Dr. Lee Valentine, Chairman of the Space Studies Institute and an early investor in XCOR Aerospace, about commercial spaceflight:

The third video switches to a different type of private space activity – advanced amateur astrophotography – and includes an interview with astrophotographer Adam Block: