Rosetta spacecraft takes asteroid photos
PARIS, Sept. 6 (UPI) -- The Rosetta spacecraft has captured
images of an asteroid in orbit more than 220 million miles from
Earth, a European Space Agency official says.
ESA principal investigator Professor Uwe Keller said the
images taken of the diamond-shaped asteroid known as Steins offers a
rare glimpse into objects in outer space, The Daily Telegraph
reported Saturday.
"There is also a chain of seven craters that we would not
expect to see on such a small body," Keller said.
"We normally see craters like this on moons like our own. We
have to look at why they are there, but clearly Steins has a complex
collision history. The color of Steins is essentially gray but it is
a little bit reddish. It is also larger than we expected."
Rosetta will try to land on the comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko
sometime in 2015 in an attempt to study the celestial object's
chemistry, the Telegraph said.
The British newspaper said the closest images of a comet
came in 2005 when NASA struck one with a rocket as part of a Deep
Impact spacecraft mission.
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