OSIRIS-REx Captures Image Of Jupiter, Moons

By Sara Hammond
Published: Tuesday, February 14, 2017 - 2:34pm
Updated: Tuesday, February 14, 2017 - 2:35pm
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(Photo courtesy of NASA/Goddard/University of Arizona)
An image of Jupiter taken by OSIRIS-REx, 75 million miles from Earth and 419 million miles from Jupiter. With an exposure time of two seconds, the image renders Jupiter overexposed, but allows for enhanced detection of stars in the background.

In a search for as-yet unseen asteroids, NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft has taken a photo of the solar system’s largest planet and several of its satellites.

The University of Arizona mission to collect a sample from an asteroid activated one of its cameras last week to look for other asteroids believed to be orbiting Earth. Those asteroids are referred to as Trojans.

On the first day of its asteroid-search campaign, OSIRIS-Rex’s camera snapped a photo of Jupiter and three of its moons.

In a news release, NASA says the spacecraft was 419 million miles from the giant planet when the image was taken. The Trojan asteroid campaign is allowing the mission to test its camera on its journey to the asteroid Bennu.

The spacecraft is scheduled to get a sample of Bennu in 2020 and return to Earth in 2023.

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