Asteroid experts catch final glimpse of Solar Orbiter

Tuesday, February 11, 2020 - 09:50 in Astronomy & Space

Image: Last night, ESA’s Planetary Defence team observed the rare moment in which an object escaped our planet’s gravity, in contrast to their normal objects of study – potentially hazardous rocks that could strike it.At 19:15 UTC (20:15 CET) on 10 February, just over 20 hours after the launch of Solar Orbiter, the team took the opportunity to capture this sequence of observations using the Schmidt telescope at Calar Alto, Spain.The clip covers a timespan of about 10 minutes, and is made up of 36 observations each 10 seconds long.At the time it was taken, Solar Orbiter was roughly 338 000 km away from Earth and travelling to Venus for its first gravitational assist around Christmas day this year. Still within the Moon’s orbit - just - it was already a faint object in the sky, shining as bright as a magnitude 19.5 star (250 000 times fainter than we...

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