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By Michael.Buckley - Johns Hopkins University News
The NEAR Shoemaker
spacecraft made history once again on Jan. 28 when it brushed
over the "toe" end of Eros, less than two miles (2.74 kilometers)
from its surface, at 5:41 a.m. EST (ground receive time). The
daring pass - the closest any spacecraft has come to an asteroid
-marked the conclusion of a 4-day series of low-altitude flyovers
that is returning extraordinarily detailed images of the asteroid's
surface.
The low pass
sequence ended yesterday at 1:22 p.m. EST (ground receive time),
when a 3.8-second burst from the spacecraft's 5-pound thrusters
pulled it away from its breathtaking vantage point, and back toward
an orbit 22 miles (35 kilometers) above the asteroid. There it
will remain circling Eros until a maneuver on Feb. 12 pulls the
spacecraft out of orbit and into position for its descent to the
asteroid. Several more engine burns will slow NEAR Shoemaker's
descent, allowing it to settle on to the asteroid's surface at
about 3 p.m. EST.
View today's
image at: http://near.jhuapl.edu/iod/20010129/
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