Inizio Registrati Login

Elenco album Ultimi arrivi Ultimi commenti Più viste Più votate Preferiti Cerca

Inizio > SOLAR SYSTEM > Mercury
Ritorna alla pagina delle miniature FILE 23629/25353 Torna all'inizio Guarda foto precedente Guarda foto successiva Salta alla fine
Rayed Crater on Mercury
Just above and to the left of center of this image is a small crater with a pronounced set of bright rays extending across Mercury's surface away from the crater. Bright rays are commonly made in a crater-forming explosion when an asteroid strikes the surface of an airless body like the Moon or Mercury. But rays fade with time as tiny meteoroids and particles from the Solar Wind strike the surface and darken the rays. The prominence of these rays implies that the small crater at the center of the ray pattern formed comparatively recently.
This image is 1 in a planned set of 99. Nine different views of Mercury were snapped in this set to create a mosaic pattern with images in 3 rows and 3 columns. The WAC is equipped with 11 narrow-band color filters, and each of the 9 different views was acquired through all 11 filters. This image was taken in filter 7, which is sensitive to light near the red end of the visible spectrum (750 nm), and shows features as small as about 6 Km (about 4 miles) in size. 

The MESSENGER team is studying this previously unseen side of Mercury in detail to map and identify new geologic features and to construct the Planet’s geological history. 

Mission Elapsed Time (MET) of image: 108827618
Parole chiave: Mercury Fly-By

Rayed Crater on Mercury

Just above and to the left of center of this image is a small crater with a pronounced set of bright rays extending across Mercury's surface away from the crater. Bright rays are commonly made in a crater-forming explosion when an asteroid strikes the surface of an airless body like the Moon or Mercury. But rays fade with time as tiny meteoroids and particles from the Solar Wind strike the surface and darken the rays. The prominence of these rays implies that the small crater at the center of the ray pattern formed comparatively recently.
This image is 1 in a planned set of 99. Nine different views of Mercury were snapped in this set to create a mosaic pattern with images in 3 rows and 3 columns. The WAC is equipped with 11 narrow-band color filters, and each of the 9 different views was acquired through all 11 filters. This image was taken in filter 7, which is sensitive to light near the red end of the visible spectrum (750 nm), and shows features as small as about 6 Km (about 4 miles) in size.

The MESSENGER team is studying this previously unseen side of Mercury in detail to map and identify new geologic features and to construct the Planet’s geological history.

Mission Elapsed Time (MET) of image: 108827618

as15-96-13094.JPG SOL035-1.jpg SOL807-2N198008906EFFAR00P1987R0M1.jpg EnceladusPlume-IMG002944-br500.jpg SOL1434-2N253666065EFFAX05F0006L0M1.jpg
Informazioni sul file
Nome del file:ZZ-Mercury-Craters-Unnamed_Rayed_Crater-209510.jpg
Nome album:MareKromium / Mercury
Valutazione (4 voti):55555(Mostra dettagli)
Parole chiave:Mercury / Fly-By
Copyright:NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington
Dimensione del file:846 KiB
Data di inserimento:Feb 02, 2008
Dimensioni:1018 x 1024 pixels
Visualizzato:55 volte
URL:https://www.lunexit.it/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=19461
Preferiti:Aggiungi ai preferiti
 
 

Powered by Coppermine Photo Gallery