In November 2010, the Deep Impact Flyby spacecraft flew past comet Hartley 2. This was the spacecraft's second flyby of a comet. And as in 2005, it got some spectacular images of a comet nucleus up close. With extended mission ideas being proposed, EPOXI Spacecraft Team Chief Steve Wissler was curious about whether the MRI could be used to take images of something other than a comet nucleus for which it is optimized. It is a slower (f/17) optical system than what would normally be used for imaging traditional astronomical targets. The filters are also designed for comet imaging -- there are no traditional RGB filters. Nevertheless, Steve picked a few astronomical targets of different types and worked with Ken Klaasen and Dennis Wellnitz to set up the observations. Steve is hoping to set up some educational outreach activities where students could submit proposals for observations, and once the images are on the ground and calibrated, the students could do the final processing.
Another purpose for the observations was training. Steve has some new members on his team, and without an active science mission, he needed something for the experienced members (who were forgetting how do do things) and the new members to use for training purposes.
M 51 with SN2011dh
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NGC 6960 The Veil Nebula
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NGC 6960 The Veil Nebula
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M 27 The Dumbbell Nebula
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Caption: These images were acquired by the EPOXI mission as part of an operational training exercise. The targets were selected because they were easily accessible from the spacecraft’s current orbit using the Medium Resolution Imager.
M51 | NGC6960 | M27 | |
frame | 512 | 1024 | 256 |
filter | 1 (clear) | 1 (clear) | 1 (clear) |
exposure | 7x17min | 10x17 | 7x17 |
comments: | Processing done by Steven Wissler, Spacecraft Team Chief for EPOXI, who is also a very accomplished astrophotgrapher. Images stacked in Nebulosity using 1.5 sigma to remove cosmic rays. Stretching and final processing in Photoshop. |
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UMD
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