Messenger Sends First Full Fly-By Image of Mercury 55
An anonymous reader writes with this snippet from Gizmodo: "NASA's Messenger (MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry and Ranging spacecraft) has flown by just 125 miles over the surface of Mercury, the closest planet to the Sun and the smallest in the Solar System. This is the first time in history that the whole planet is going to be photographed in its entirety by an Earthling probe, with amazing resolution and ultra-crisp detail." The picture at the top of the linked story is fantastic, too.
Did they (Score:1)
Re:Did they (Score:5, Funny)
Tom Tucker: Yes they did, and we go to Ollie Williams with the Black-U-Weather Mercury Forecast. Ollie?
Ollie Williams: It's hot!
Tom Tucker: Thank you, Ollie.
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No, but they are such a cool, happening, and together frood that they do have a towel. Can they borrow your thermometer?
Earthling (Score:1)
"by an Earthling probe". Interesting phrase to put in there. Unless I misundertand it, it is assuming that some other intelligent life has already probed (as it were) Mercury? I don't really see a point to put that in there, except to be a bit more sensationalist.
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Do they claim to be from France?
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The Soviets conquered Mercury! So that's where they all went!
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You don't watch the news very often do you? Missed the whole "Earth makes contact with ET" news? The biggest news of the millenium and you missed it? How are you ever going to explain that to your grandchildren...
Hm. (Score:1)
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Gizmodo?? WTF (Score:5, Informative)
Here's a link to the homepage for the messenger mission. http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/ [jhuapl.edu]
And here's a link for the flyby 2 page http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/mer_flyby2.html [jhuapl.edu]
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http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/news_room/details.php?id=111 [jhuapl.edu]
and a followup article
http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/news_room/details.php?id=112 [jhuapl.edu]
RAEG (Score:2, Insightful)
>>the closest planet to the Sun and the smallest in the Solar System.
Anyone else rage?
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Someone having Pluto separation anxiety?
Re:RAEG (Score:5, Funny)
Looks like the fact that the International Astronomical Union mickey-moused a minnie-planet is driving this user goofy.
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Well, he has a good idea. Let's remove the smallest planet from the list of planets. Ofcourse, if you try this the all but smallest planet will now be the smallest planet. That way we will remove all planets from the list of planets thus breaking the main power source of the IAU. They will be powerless to stop us and then we will add pluto to the list of planets of the new astronomical agency tapping the power of all the planets. Then we can increase the number of planets by including objects in the Kuiper
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It's a Jovian plot. Soon Mercury will not be making the grade either, and slowly, one by one, the other planets will be biting the dust, until only one is left.
Say no to this slippery slope! Call your senator today and have them stop this nonsense!
Highly Reflective Craters (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyone have any idea why?
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The light angle is probably part of it. Another factor may be crater age. On the Moon, more recent craters (and ejecta debris) is lighter in color than the older stuff, this may also be true on Mercury.
Freshness... (Score:5, Informative)
From Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuiper_(crater_on_Mercury) [wikipedia.org]
soft or hard (Score:2)
If you look at some of the images the creators have rough edges while others look really smooth. Almost like the planet was softer during some impacts and harder for others. Either way for the smallest planet, it sure has a lot of impacts on it. Makes me think how violent the solar system was in the past.
We, (humans), are bloody amazing. (Score:2)
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We're simultaneously so amazing, and yet so obtuse.
I see you've been following the US election cycle closely.
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We can [jhuapl.edu], jackass. There's not always a point.
Re:Grey? (Score:4, Informative)
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Actually, I think the conversation would go more like this:
"hissssssssssssss"
(That's the sound of your once molten hair evaporating)
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I assume that the planet is so cratered because of no/minimal atmosphere?
I can't tell, exactly, from the photograph, but are there any mountain ranges on Mercury? The image makes it look, except for the craters, pretty uniform in the surface elevation?
Can anyone give us a sense of scale for those craters? I'm guessing that, to be as well defined as they appear from space, they must be something like 1/4 mile or 1/2 mile deep?
Colour images please (Score:2, Insightful)
And when the hell are we going to get coloured images of Mercury? I mean true RGB colours, not remapped colours. I know that Mercury's colours are probably not the most exciting thing ever, but damnit we have yet to see a single damn colour picture of that bloody planet and the Messenger guys are literally sitting on it.
That's my beef with this mission, all they're giving us is the few snapshots they can be bothered to give us, and that's it. And the best they can be bothered to do at updating the maps is t [jhuapl.edu]
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Re:Colour images please (Score:5, Informative)
IANARS, but I would think they are waiting until they are in orbit before they deploy the WAC, probably due to power requirements. I could be wrong though.
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Oblig (Score:1)
The first thing I thought when I saw the picture was "That's not a moon..." [imdb.com]
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This has not been funny for a REALLY LONG TIME [wikipedia.org].
First Impression (Score:2)
"Earthling probe?" (Score:2)
"Earthling probe?" Are we officially Earthlings now?
I think I'd prefer Earthican probe, or maybe even Terran probe.