NASA's Dawn
spacecraft took this image of Ceres on March 1, 2015 when it was about
30,000 miles (about 48,000 kilometers) from the dwarf planet. The
spacecraft arrived at Ceres on March 6, 2015.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/MPS/DLR/IDA
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/MPS/DLR/IDA
The year of the dwarf planet has begun.
NASA's Dawn probe arrived at Ceres
today (March 6) at about 7:39 a.m. EST (1239 GMT), becoming the first
spacecraft ever to orbit a dwarf planet. Dawn's observations over the
next 16 months should lift the veil on Ceres, which has remained largely
mysterious since it was first spotted more than two centuries ago.
"Since its discovery in 1801, Ceres was known as a planet, then an
asteroid and later a dwarf planet," Dawn mission director and chief
engineer Marc Rayman, who's based at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
(JPL) in Pasadena, California, said in a statement. "Now, after a journey of 3.1 billion miles (4.9 billion kilometers) and 7.5 years, Dawn calls Ceres 'home.'"
NASA officials got a signal from Dawn confirming that it's healthy and in orbit at about 8:36 a.m. EST (1336 GMT) today.
The milestone comes just four months ahead of another highly anticipated dwarf-planet encounter: On July 14, NASA's New Horizons probe will
zoom through the Pluto system, giving scientists their first good looks
at that faraway dwarf planet and its five known moons.
Artist's concept of NASA's Dawn spacecraft at the dwarf planet Ceres.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Dawn of the solar system
The $473 million Dawn mission launched in September 2007 to study Vesta and Ceres, the two largest objects in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Vesta's diameter is 330 miles (530 km), while Ceres is about 590 miles (950 km) wide.
Both Vesta and Ceres are
leftovers from the solar system's early days, planetary building blocks
that would likely have kept growing if not for the interfering
influence of Jupiter's immense gravitational tug.
The two bodies are "intact protoplanets from the very dawn of the solar
system," Dawn Deputy Principal Investigator Carol Raymond, also of JPL,
said during a news conference Monday (March 2)." So they're literally
fossils that we can investigate to really understand the processes that
were going on at that time."
Dawn orbited Vesta from July 2011 through September 2012, when the
probe departed for Ceres. So today's arrival made history in another way
as well: Dawn became the first spacecraft ever to orbit two objects
beyond the Earth-moon system. [Photos: Asteroid Vesta and NASA's Dawn Spacecraft]
The mission's spaceflight feats are made possible by Dawn's innovative
propulsion system, which accelerates xenon ions out the back of the
spacecraft. This process generates tiny amounts of thrust; it would take
Dawn four days to go from 0 to 60 mph (97 km/h), team members have
said.
But Dawn's ion drive is
about 10 times more efficient than traditional chemical systems. So the
engines can keep firing for weeks, months and years, accelerating Dawn
to tremendous speeds.
"With the 1,000 lbs. [454 kilograms] of xenon propellant that was
loaded on board, Dawn has already accomplished more than 24,000 mph
[38,624 km/h] of velocity change," Dawn project manager Robert Mase of
JPL said during Monday's news conference. "To put that in context:
That's more than it takes to get a vehicle from the surface of the Earth
up to the International Space Station."
Thanks to ion propulsion, Dawn crept up on Ceres slowly and gradually.
The probe eased into orbit today without the need for any harrowing
make-or-break maneuvers.
The mysteries of Ceres
Ceres is an intriguing world that in many ways looks more like the icy
moons of the outer solar system, such as Jupiter's satellite Europa and
the Saturn moon Enceladus, than its rocky neighbors in the asteroid
belt.
For example, the dwarf planet is thought to consist of 25 to 30 percent
water by mass, mostly in the form of ice. Ceres may also once have had
(and might even still possess) an ocean of liquid water beneath its
surface, as Europa and Enceladus are thought to. Indeed, some
researchers believe Ceres may be capable of supporting microbial life.
"It's really going to be exciting to see what this exotic, alien world
looks like," Rayman told Space.com in late January. "We're finally going
to learn about this place."
Dawn is not equipped to search for signs of life. But the probe might
be able to spot evidence of an underground ocean (if it exists), if it
burbles up in places to interact with surface rocks, Rayman said.
Measurements of Ceres' surface temperatures, when coupled with models of
heat transportation through Ceres, could also shed light on the
question of underground liquid water, said Dawn principal investigator
Chris Russell of UCLA.
Dawn will also investigate two Ceres mysteries that have cropped up in
the past year or so. Mission scientists will try to figure out just what
is producing Ceres' mysterious bright spots,
and they'll attempt to confirm and characterize a tenuous water-vapor
plume spotted recently by researchers using Europe's Herschel Space
Observatory.
Overall, Dawn will characterize the dwarf planet in detail, mapping out
its surface and determining what Ceres is made of, among other tasks.
"We'll do typical planetary geology, more similar to what we do on Mars than what we did with Vesta," Russell told Space.com.
This work will not start immediately; Dawn will spend the next six
weeks spiraling down to its initial science orbit, getting there on
April 23. The probe will then begin taking Ceres' measure from an
altitude of 8,400 miles (13,500 km). Dawn will study the dwarf planet
from a series of increasingly closer-in orbits until the mission ends in
June 2016.
Sizing up dwarf planets
While Ceres and Pluto are both dwarf planets — a category created by
the International Astronomical Union (IAU) in 2006, when it demoted
Pluto from a full-fledged planet in a decision that remains
controversial today — they're quite different from each other, Russell
said.
"Pluto formed differently, formed at a different time and formed out of different materials" than Ceres, he said.
Pluto is also more than twice as wide as Ceres and lies more than 14
times farther from the sun than the queen of the asteroid belt does. So
the data returned by Dawn and New Horizons will likely not paint a
unifying picture of just what it means to be a dwarf planet, Russell
said.
"The legacy [of the two missions] is freeing these bodies from
arbitrary labels based on their size or their ability to scatter other
objects, or whatever the IAU had going through its head," he said.
"These bodies are being liberated from classification, and we now can
understand them in their own right."
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