Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Space China NASA

Views of the Asteroid Toutatis, From Earth As Well As Close-Up 23

When Chinese probe Chang'e buzzed the asteroid Toutatis, it wasn't the only one watching. NASA's observatory in Goldstone, CA was taking radar images, which have now been assembled into a short (40-second) animation. The craft was recording the encounter, too, as reported by Sky & Telescope, which also gives a good summary of the history behind Chang'e's mission.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Views of the Asteroid Toutatis, From Earth As Well As Close-Up

Comments Filter:
  • According to yahoo news it is huge and Sky & Telescope says it is little. :)

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      That's what you get for asking Marketing Dept.

    • According to yahoo news it is huge and Sky & Telescope says it is little. :)

      Also, TFA's source [space.com] has 16 (sixteen) collaborating spy/ad/crap/tracksites going nuts with scripts and cookies and all that.

      By comparison, Slashdot has three: DoubleClick, Google Analytics and ScoreCard Research.

  • by Janek Kozicki ( 722688 ) on Sunday December 16, 2012 @04:18PM (#42308367) Journal
    Thumbs up for the chineese. As much as I don't like their politcs & government, I am really happy that they will hopefully start a new space race. All the humanity will benefit from that.
  • That gave me a little thrill. That's one of the building blocks of the future, folks, literally!

  • The radar images are great, but they're definitely not conventional photos - the viewpoint-from-Earth is actually from the 'top' of the image, looking down. They're constructed from a combination of distance measurements and Doppler shifts [planetary.org], the latter thanks to the rotation of the asteroid.

    So basically it means a single transmitter and single receiver can figure out a two-dimensional image from a vast distance - and it's nice that these images quite closely match the conventional, optical images taken by th

  • by Anonymous Coward

    In fact, that one small village that still holds out against the invaders, would all get a few goose-bumps from having an asteroid named after their favourite god.

    I have to assume that there's also a asteroid named Belenos and one named Belisima. Fun times reading those books - and now my kids love them. Thanks for bringing up the memories Slashdot.

BLISS is ignorance.

Working...