Mariner's Mercury
Mercury, the closest planet to the Sun, remains
the most mysterious of the
Solar System's inner planets.
Hiding in the Sun's glare it is
a
difficult target for Earth bound observers.
The only spacecraft to
explore Mercury
close-up was Mariner 10 which
executed three
flybys of Mercury
in 1974 and 1975, surveying approximately 45
percent of its surface.
Mariner
10 deftly manuevered to
photograph part of the sunlit
hemisphere during each approach, passed behind the planet,
and continued to image the sun-facing side as the spacecraft receded.
Its highest resolution
photographs recorded features
approximately a mile across.
A reprocessing
of the
Mariner 10 data has resulted in this dramatic mosaic.
Like the Earth's Moon, Mercury's surface
shows the scars of impact cratering -
the smooth vertical band and patches visible above represent regions
where no image information is available.