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The Planetary Society BlogBy Emily LakdawallaMESSENGER: A snapshot of homeAug. 17, 2010 | 10:04 PDT | 17:04 UTC
MESSENGER is in a unique position in the solar system, orbiting the Sun well within the orbit of Venus. From there, it can gaze outward from the Sun to search for tiny objects that may possibly be traveling in the same region, called vulcanoids. It's hard to search for vulcanoids from Earth, because looking for objects close to the Sun necessarily means pointing your telescopes close to the Sun; the tiny objects are lost in the glare and would never rise much above our horizon at night when our planet blocks out the Sun's light. But MESSENGER can look out into the night and potentially see these things, lit fully by the Sun behind the spacecraft. MESSENGER has been performing these searches for several months around each of its perihelion passes, when it is closest to the Sun, near Mercury's orbit.
I noticed that the just-released issue of Icarus is all about MESSENGER -- 23 peer-reviewed articles buttoning up the current state of Mercury science, employing the data from MESSENGER's three Mercury flybys. That set of publications will serve as the foundation for the science to come once MESSENGER finally arrives at Mercury in March.
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Also it looks like there is 2 planets in the top middle
and one in the lower left at the same level as the earth.
what are they here is a bigger image.
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/1009/earthmoon_messenger_big.png