NEAR Spacecraft Survives Landing on Asteroid Eros
Yesterday NEAR-Shoemaker became the
first spacecraft to land on an asteroid
and send signals back from its surface.
Since the
robot spacecraft was not designed for such a
contingency,
the success of the landing on
asteroid
433 Eros was not assured.
Shown above is the last picture taken by
NEAR-Shoemaker before its touchdown.
The streaking on the lower part of the image
was caused by the loss of
telemetry as the satellite impacted the
surface.
The image was taken 130 meters above the surface and
spans 6 meters across.
Rocks as small as a human hand are visible.
As engineers
continue to try to communicate
with the beached car-sized spacecraft,
scientists will work to understand features visible in the
highest resolution photographs ever taken of an asteroid.