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posted by janrinok on Wednesday June 24 2015, @07:21AM   Printer-friendly
from the I-spy-with-my-little-eye dept.

NASA is busy this week with new images returned from Ceres, Pluto, and Saturn's Moon Dione. First up, Ceres:

"New images of dwarf planet Ceres, taken by NASA's Dawn spacecraft, show the cratered surface of this mysterious world in sharper detail than ever before. These are among the first snapshots from Dawn's second mapping orbit, which is 2,700 miles (4,400 kilometers) above Ceres.

The region with the brightest spots is in a crater about 55 miles (90 kilometers) across. The spots consist of many individual bright points of differing sizes, with a central cluster. So far, scientists have found no obvious explanation for their observed locations or brightness levels."

Cassini's extended mission continues to show us the Saturn system:

"The rugged landscape of Saturn's fracture-faced moon Dione is revealed in images sent back by NASA's Cassini spacecraft from its latest flyby. Cassini buzzed past Dione on June 16, coming within 321 miles (516 kilometers) of the moon's surface."

New Horizons has returned the first color movies from the Pluto system as well as the best pictures yet of the surfaces of both Pluto and Charon:

"In a long series of images obtained by New Horizons' telescopic Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) May 29-June 19, Pluto and its largest moon, Charon, appear to more than double in size. From this rapidly improving imagery, scientists on the New Horizons team have found that the "close approach hemisphere" on Pluto that New Horizons will fly over has the greatest variety of terrain types seen on the planet so far. They have also discovered that Charon has a "dark pole" – a mysterious dark region that forms a kind of anti-polar cap."


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  • (Score: 2) by No Respect on Wednesday June 24 2015, @08:30PM

    by No Respect (991) on Wednesday June 24 2015, @08:30PM (#200571)

    I just noticed this as well, the story title promises new developments "this week" and it goes on to say NASA is busy "this week" with "new images" from three of its spacecraft. I thought it worth pointing out that those "new" images of Ceres are dated 2 weeks ago. The Pluto and Dione pictures are new, but the Ceres ones are old news.

    I crave new information about Ceres and every single damn story I see on the internet represents itself falsely in that regard. NASA releases a few new pictures one day and those exact same pictures all of a sudden become "breaking news!" for a solid month.

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