Deep Impact update
September 2005
Two months
ago, much of the world stopped to watch
Comet Tempel 1 plough into the Deep Impact
spacecraft and the resulting spectacular
release of a cloud of dust and gas. Some
people watched through telescopes, and some
watched the images sent back from the flyby
spacecraft by television or computer.
Whatever the form of observation, it is true
that it was a Deep Impact felt around the
world. For the past two, almost three months
the science team has been hard at work
studying the resulting data while the
engineering team planned and performed a
maneuver to put the spacecraft on a new path
and into a safe sleep mode. If you missed
any of this, you may want to take a look at
our web site and read the newsletter below
for new updates.
http://deepimpact.jpl.nasa.gov
http://deepimpact.umd.edu
Deep Impact probe hits
comet
Mission aims to unlock secrets of origins of
solar system
Monday, July 4, 2005;
Posted: 8:23 a.m. EDT (12:23 GMT)
The
"flyby" spacecraft photographed this image
of Monday's collision.
"The image clearly shows a spectacular
impact," Michael A'Hearn, the mission's
scientist, said in a news release.
The Deep Impact spacecraft released the
washing machine-size probe, known as the "impactor,"
on Sunday and then moved into position to
watch the collision.
Images showed a huge explosion on the comet
-- possibly the equivalent to five tons of
TNT. The impactor was destroyed, as
expected, but the Deep Impact ship survived
to beam back images.
NASA scientists got word of their success at
1:57 a.m. ET, five minutes after the
collision.
"This mission is truly a smashing success,"
said Andy Dantzler, director of NASA's solar
system division, in a news release.
"Tomorrow and in the days ahead, we will
know a lot more about the origins of our
solar system."
Icy dirt ball targeted
Comets are the trailblazers of the heavens
-- rushing through space from the far
reaches of the solar system and back toward
the sun in long oval orbits.
They are made of ice, dust and gas left over
from when the sun and the planets formed.
Scientists believe comets may hold the keys
to the birth of the solar system and perhaps
to the birth of life.
The target of Deep Impact was Tempel 1, a
jet-black, pickle-shaped, icy dirt ball
traveling at 6.3 miles per second.
Since its January 12 launch, NASA's Deep
Impact spacecraft raced to catch up with
Tempel 1 while observing it along its
journey through the solar system.
At a cost of $330 million, Deep Impact is
the eighth mission in NASA's Discovery
Program, which supports low-budget science
missions.
Among the program's other endeavors: the
Near Shoemaker that landed a spacecraft on
asteroid Eros; the Mars Pathfinder; and the
solar wind collection spacecraft Genesis,
which crashed into Earth when its parachutes
failed to open on descent.
The Deep Impact spacecraft was composed of
two probes mated together -- "flyby" and "impactor."
Flyby is about the size of a small car and
monitored the impact. It carries two cameras
-- a high-resolution one that was tightly
focused on the crater and a
medium-resolution one that's taking wider
views.
Impactor was an 820-pound copper-fortified
probe designed to produce maximum wallop
when it hit the comet. It also carried a
medium-resolution camera that recorded the
probe's final moments before it collided
with the comet.
Spectacular show ushers in Fourth of July
Staging the fireworks show began 24 hours
before impact when mission scientists at
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory released
impactor from flyby.
Scientists spent Sunday steering flyby into
position for observing while aligning
impactor for its rendezvous with Tempel 1.
Tempel 1 is traveling through space at about
23,000 mph (37,100 km/h) -- the equivalent
of traveling from New York to Los Angeles,
California, in less than 6.5 minutes.
At those speeds, impactor had to be in the
right place at the right time to intercept
the speeding snowball.
"It's a bullet trying to hit a second bullet
with the third bullet," Rick Grammier, Deep
Impact project manager at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, said in June.
During its final two hours, impactor was on
autopilot, maneuvering itself into the path
of the comet.
Then, at about 1:52 am ET Monday, Tempel 1
slammed into impactor -- an event "all over
in the blink of an eye," Grammier said.
Until its death, impactor recorded images
and gathered data while flyby passed 310
miles (500 kilometers) away, observing the
impact, the ejected material, and the
structure and composition of the comet's
interior. Most of the data will be stored on
flyby and radioed back to Earth after the
encounter.
Every space and ground-based telescope large
enough to do the job was watching the event.
The Hubble, Chandra, Spitzer, Galex and SWAS
space telescopes were all recording it. The
Rosetta spacecraft, a European probe on its
way to another comet, also observed.
On the ground, more than 100 professional
astronomers at 60 observatories and a small
army of amateur astronomers turned their
telescopes in Tempel 1's direction.
The faraway comet
May
4th, 2005 Sixty-nine days before it's
scheduled to come into contact with a
comet, NASA's Deep Impact spacecraft has
taken its first photo of the mass, known
as Tempel 1. The image, at right, was
captured from a distance of 39.7 million
miles. Deep Impact is on a mission to
release an "impactor" that will collide
with Tempel 1 as part of an attempt to
reveal new information about the
composition of comets and how the solar
system was formed.
Credit: NASA




Launch
and flight teams are in final preparations for the planned Jan.
12, 2005, liftoff from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla.,
of NASA's Deep Impact spacecraft. The mission is designed for a
six-month, one-way, 431 million kilometer (268 million mile)
voyage. Deep Impact will deploy a probe that essentially will be
"run over" by the nucleus of comet Tempel 1 at approximately
37,000 kph (23,000 mph).