http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMNMYO4KKF_index_0.html

Steins: A diamond in the sky
European Space Agency
Rosetta
6 September 2008

The first images from Rosetta's OSIRIS imaging system and VIRTIS
infrared spectrometer were derived from raw data this morning and have
delivered spectacular results.
 
"Steins looks like a diamond in the sky," said Uwe Keller, Principal
Investigator for the OSIRIS imaging system from the Max Planck Institut
Fuer Sonnensystemforschung, Lindau.

Visible in the image are several small craters on the asteroid, and two
huge ones, one of which is 2 km in diameter, indicating that the
asteroid must be very old.

The images are 50 to 60 pixels in diameter, enough to characterise the
shape and other characteristics of the body of the asteroid.  
 
Rita Schulz, Rosetta Project Scientist, said, "In the images is a chain
of impact craters, which must have formed from recurring impact as the
asteroid rotated. The impact may have been caused by a meteoroid stream,
or fragments from a shattered small body."

The chain is composed of about 7 craters. To determine the age of the
asteroid, a count of the craters on the asteroid's surface has been
started (the more the number of craters, the older the asteroid). So
far, 23 craters have been spotted.

>From the images, scientists will try and understand why the asteroid is
unusually bright, and how fine grains of the surface regolith are. This
will tell them more about how the asteroid formed.
 
Gerhard Schwehm, Mission Manager for Rosetta said, "It looks like a
typical asteroid, but it is really fascinating how much we can learn
from just the images. This is our first science highlight; we certainly
have a lot of promising science ahead of us. I'm already looking forward
to encountering our next diamond in the sky, the much bigger Lutetia."
 
The OSIRIS imaging system's Wide Angle Camera (WAC) worked perfectly
through the fly-by.

The OSIRIS team expects that the images that they will retrieve from the
Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) will be of comparable resolution. This will
add to the detailed colour information and hence to knowledge of the
surface composition.
 
Science team members noted that the Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) appears to
have switched to safe mode a few minutes before closest approach, but
switched back on after a few hours. The software is programmed to switch
to safe mode when certain parameter thresholds are crossed to protect
the camera. The team will concentrate investigating the reasons for this
anomaly once the science data has been analysed.

After analysis of the Rosetta data, Steins will be one of the
best-characterised asteroids so far.

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