Messenger's second of three flybys of Mercury before getting into orbit is happening today. The closest approach will be on the night side within 200km of the surface within two hours of this writing.
The Planetary Society Blog | The Planetary Society
MESSENGER Web Site
Most recent image at this time: http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/gallery/sciencePhotos/image.php?gallery_id=2&image_id=212
The part seen here haven't been seen by spacecraft before. On the other side is more unseen area, including the gap in Mariner 10 coverage dating back to the 1970s. Beyond the edge of the Mariner 10 coverage, we'll see a rayed crater in the southern hemisphere that looks pretty in the Earth based radar maps and will find out what it looks like in visible light soon enough.
Here's an Arecibo radar image of this crater.
http://www.psrd.hawaii.edu/WebImg/HarmonRadarFig2.jpg
Rougher areas are radar-bright due to more of the radar getting scattered back to the antenna. So are areas tilted towards the antenna like the sides of mountains.
About radar imaging:
http://southport.jpl.nasa.gov/desc/imagingradarv3.html
The Planetary Society Blog | The Planetary Society
MESSENGER Web Site
Most recent image at this time: http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/gallery/sciencePhotos/image.php?gallery_id=2&image_id=212
The part seen here haven't been seen by spacecraft before. On the other side is more unseen area, including the gap in Mariner 10 coverage dating back to the 1970s. Beyond the edge of the Mariner 10 coverage, we'll see a rayed crater in the southern hemisphere that looks pretty in the Earth based radar maps and will find out what it looks like in visible light soon enough.
Here's an Arecibo radar image of this crater.
http://www.psrd.hawaii.edu/WebImg/HarmonRadarFig2.jpg
Rougher areas are radar-bright due to more of the radar getting scattered back to the antenna. So are areas tilted towards the antenna like the sides of mountains.
About radar imaging:
http://southport.jpl.nasa.gov/desc/imagingradarv3.html
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I love to look at neat images from planets and stars outside our Earth.
It's the first time it had been seen in visible light. 