WHAT WE DO


JOINRENEWJOIN

Year in Space Calendar
 

The Planetary Society Blog

By Emily Lakdawalla


Where does Steins fit in?

Sep. 6, 2008 | 05:11 PDT | 12:11 UTC
We need your help.
Please donate to support our blog, website, and podcast.
RSS 2.0 News Feed

One thing I couldn't resist doing before returning to bed: seeing where Steins fits in, in context with all the other asteroids and comets that have been explored to date. Here's an updated version of my asteroids-and-comets-to-scale montage, suitably sized for a desktop or Powerpoint. Enjoy!

All asteroids and comets visited by spacecraft as of early 2008
All asteroids and comets visited by spacecraft as of early 2008
The total of four comets and eight asteroid systems (including nine separate bodies) that have been examined up close by spacecraft are shown here to scale with each other (75 meters per pixel, in the fully enlarged version). Most of these were visited only briefly, in flyby missions, so we have only one point of view on each; only Eros and Itokawa were orbited and mapped completely.

This image is also available without text. There is also a larger version at 20 meters per pixel (6000x4500 pixels, 4.2 MB), with or without text (3.9 MB).

Credits: All images NASA / JPL / Ted Stryk except: Mathilde: NASA / JHUAPL / Ted Stryk; Steins: ESA / OSIRIS team; Eros: NASA / JHUAPL; Itokawa: ISAS / JAXA / Emily Lakdawalla; Halley: Russian Academy of Sciences / Ted Stryk; Tempel 1: NASA / JPL / UMD; Wild 2: NASA / JPL.



Emily's on Twitter! »

Sign up for email updates!
Email address:
(optional) Your name: