Image Credit: NASA, Johns Hopkins Univ. APL, Arizona State Univ., CIW
Sunday, April 19, 2015
NASA Photo of the Day
April 18:
The Great Crater Hokusai
Image Credit: NASA, Johns Hopkins Univ. APL, Arizona State Univ., CIW
Explanation:
One of the largest young craters on Mercury,
114 kilometer (71 mile) diameter Hokusai crater's bright
rays are known to extend across
much of the planet.
But this mosaic of oblique views focuses on Hokusai close up,
its sunlit
central peaks, terraced
crater walls, and
frozen sea of impact melt on the
crater's floor.
The images were captured by the MESSENGER spacecraft.
The first to orbit Mercury,
since 2011 MESSENGER has conducted
scientific explorations, including
extensive imaging of the
Solar System's innermost planet.
Now running out of propellant and unable to counter orbital
perturbations caused by the Sun's gravity,
MESSENGER is predicted to
impact
the surface of Mercury on April 30.
Image Credit: NASA, Johns Hopkins Univ. APL, Arizona State Univ., CIW
Labels:
cool stuff,
Science and stuff
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