[meteorite-list] Dawn Journal - August 30, 2013

From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon, 2 Sep 2013 17:27:46 -0700 (PDT)
Message-ID: <201309030027.r830RkeJ000873_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov>

http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/journal_08_30_13.asp

Dawn Journal
Dr. Marc Rayman
August 30, 2013

Dear Antecedawnts,

Traveling confidently and alone, Dawn continues to make its way through
the silent depths of the main asteroid belt. The only spacecraft ever to
have orbited a resident of the vast territory between Mars and Jupiter,
Dawn conducted a spectacular exploration of gigantic Vesta, revealing a
complex place that resembles the terrestrial planets more than typical
asteroids. Now the interplanetary adventurer is on its long journey to
the uncharted dwarf planet Ceres, by far the largest of all asteroids
(975 kilometers, or more than 600 miles, in equatorial diameter). In 2015,
the mysterious world of rock and ice will begin to give up its ancient
secrets to the immigrant from distant Earth.

Earth, Vesta, Dawn, and Ceres are following their own separate paths
around the sun. The spacecraft is patiently reshaping its orbit, using
its uniquely efficient ion propulsion system to accomplish a deep-space
expedition that would be impossible with conventional propulsion.

As we have seen in many previous logs (including, for example, here
<journal_02_28_13.asp#orbiting>), the higher an object's orbit, the
slower it needs to move in order to balance the gravitational pull,
which diminishes with distance. Blistering Mercury orbits the sun faster
than Venus, Venus goes faster than Earth, Earth goes faster than Mars,
and Mars goes faster than the residents of the asteroid belt and the
cold planets of the outer solar system. In the same way, satellites that
orbit close to Earth, including the International Space Station, move
faster than those at greater altitudes, and the moon travels even more
slowly in its very high orbit.

Dawn is now a permanent inhabitant of the main asteroid belt. Therefore,
the massive sun, the gravitational master of the solar system, has a
weaker grip on it than on Earth. So as Dawn maneuvers from Vesta to
Ceres, Earth revolves more rapidly around the sun. This month, their
independent motions have taken them to their greatest separation of the
year, as they are on opposite sides of the sun. How truly remarkable
than humankind can accomplish such a feat!

On August 4, the planet and its robotic ambassador to the cosmos were an
extraordinary 3.47 AU (519 million kilometers, or 322 million miles)
apart. (To recapture the feeling of your position in the universe then,
it may be helpful to know that the maximum range was attained at 4:16
a.m. PDT.) From the perspective of terrestrial observers, had they
possessed the superhuman (and even supertelescopic) vision needed to
descry the tiny ship far beyond the blindingly bright star, Dawn would
have appeared to be very close to the sun but not directly behind it. To
rendezvous with Vesta and then with Ceres, the spacecraft has tilted the
plane of its solar orbit. Some of the time it is north of Earth's orbital
plane, sometimes it is south. August 4 was during the northern segment, so
Dawn would have been a little north of the sun.

It's time to refer to one of those novel clocks available in the Dawn
gift shop on your planet (although if you already have such a clock, it
probably doesn't tell you that it's time - we stand by our policy of full
refunds within 24 hours, as measured by our Dawn clocks). With the sun
at the center of the clock, Earth's motion would be like that of a short
minute hand. Dawn, both farther from the sun and moving more slowly,
would be following the path of a longer hour hand. If we ignore the
effect of the ion thrust, which is constantly changing the orbit, and
the slight misalignment of the hour hand representing Dawn's being in a
different plane, the conditions on August 4 were like those at 6:00.

As time progresses and Earth continues circling the sun, it will come
closer to Dawn until April 2014 (like 12:00). Even then, however, they
will be over 1.55 AU (232 million kilometers, or 144 million miles)
apart, and they will never be that close again. The spacecraft will
continue climbing higher and higher from the sun toward Ceres, so by the
time Earth loops around once more, Dawn will be even farther from it. In
the meantime, when next the arrangement is like 6:00, in December 2014,
the separation will be more than 3.78 AU (565 million kilometers, or 351
million miles), even greater than the remarkable range a few weeks ago.

The tremendous distance this month between the spacecraft and the humans
it represents provides a convenient occasion to reflect on the
extraordinary nature of this ambitious mission of discovery, and regular
readers know that we rarely eschew such an opportunity. Indeed, Dawn and
Earth have been on opposite sides of the sun three times before (albeit
not at the same distance), in November 2008, November 2010, and March 2012.
In each case, we explained more about the nature of the alignment and
contemplated the profundity of such an epic adventure.

Well beyond Mars, fewer than a dozen probes have ever operated as far
from Earth as Dawn. Those interested in the history of space exploration
(such as your correspondent) will enumerate them, but what should be
more rewarding is marveling at the extent of humanity's reach. At this
astounding range, the deep-space ship was well in excess of one million
times farther from Earth than the International Space Station and
Tiangong-1.

Some readers may have heard tell that in days of yore, a few fortunate
humans traveled far from Earth. That was long, long ago, but tales pass
from generation to generation, and even some dim memories survive.
Apollo astronauts physically ventured to the moon, and many, many more
people were along for the ride. Yet even in those ancient times of
amazing escapades, no person reached farther than the moon does. But
Dawn, built and operated by humans to take them where they themselves
cannot (yet) go, was 1,300 times farther than the greatest distance
attained by those primitive explorers. And as with Apollo, anyone can
participate in this grand undertaking. This is a journey for everyone.

The scope is staggering and may not be possible to grasp fully. We
evolved to have a clear understanding of distances that mattered to
terrestrial creatures who had neither means nor need to comprehend much
beyond their local environment. But now, thanks to the brilliance,
persistence, meticulousness, creativity, and curiosity of our species,
our reach extends to thousands of times farther than any individual has
traveled. We do more than only /aspire/ to extend ourselves from Earth.
With our spacecraft, we create the means to transport ourselves
throughout the solar system. Our handiwork visits places and shows us
sights far, far, far beyond what could even have been imagined until
recently. Powered by the noble spirit of adventure and the yearning for
knowledge, our celestial emissaries carry us with them. Through them, as
we behold alien landscapes, sometimes eerie in their familiarity yet
more often eerie in their exoticism, but always beautiful and
spellbinding, everyone who hungers for insights into the universe is
nourished. Unbound by the planet on (or very near which) we reside, we
take flight through space and time, and we are witness to spectacles of
cosmic proportions dating back to the dawn of the solar system. With
Dawn, we are able to reach beyond our humble home, indeed beyond
ourselves. We learn much as we do, but we grow wiser even just for the
effort itself.

Dawn is 21 million kilometers (13 million miles) from Vesta and 47
million kilometers (29 million miles) from Ceres. It is also 3.43 AU
(513 million kilometers or 319 million miles) from Earth, or 1,270 times
as far as the moon and 3.40 times as far as the sun today. Radio
signals, traveling at the universal limit of the speed of light, take 57
minutes to make the round trip.
Received on Mon 02 Sep 2013 08:27:46 PM PDT


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