Authors
CT Russell, F Capaccioni, A Coradini, MC De Sanctis, WC Feldman, R Jaumann, HU Keller, TB McCord, LA McFadden, S Mottola, CM Pieters, TH Prettyman, CA Raymond, MV Sykes, DE Smith, MT Zuber
Publication date
2007/10
Journal
Earth, Moon, and Planets
Volume
101
Pages
65-91
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Description
The initial exploration of any planetary object requires a careful mission design guided by our knowledge of that object as gained by terrestrial observers. This process is very evident in the development of the Dawn mission to the minor planets 1 Ceres and 4 Vesta. This mission was designed to verify the basaltic nature of Vesta inferred both from its reflectance spectrum and from the composition of the howardite, eucrite and diogenite meteorites believed to have originated on Vesta. Hubble Space Telescope observations have determined Vesta’s size and shape, which, together with masses inferred from gravitational perturbations, have provided estimates of its density. These investigations have enabled the Dawn team to choose the appropriate instrumentation and to design its orbital operations at Vesta. Until recently Ceres has remained more of an enigma. Adaptive-optics and HST observations now …
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