Tag Archives: satellite

Despina, Moon of Neptune

neptune_despina_transit_combo_despinabrightened

Image Credit: NASA, JPL – Processed Image Copyright: Ted Stryk

Despina is a tiny moon of Neptune. A mere 148 kilometers across, diminutive Despina was discovered in 1989, in images from the Voyager 2 spacecraft taken during its encounter with the solar system’s most distant gas giant planet. But looking through the Voyager 2 data 20 years later, amateur image processor and philosophy professor Ted Stryk discovered something no one had recognized before — images that show the shadow of Despina in transit across Neptune’s blue cloud tops. His composite view of Despina and its shadow is composed of four archival frames taken on August 24, 1989, separated by nine minutes. Despina itself has been artificially brightened to make it easier to see. In ancient Greek mythology, Despina is a daughter of Poseidon, the Roman god Neptune.

APOD NASA 16-Jan-2014

Three CubeSats Released

cubesats_iss038_2832 

Image Credit: Expedition 38 Crew, NASA

Cubes are orbiting the Earth. Measuring ten-centimeters on a side, CubeSats – each roughly the size of a large coffee mug — are designed to be inexpensive both to build and to launch. Pictured above, three CubeSats were released from the International Space Station (ISS) last November by the arm of the Japanese Kibo Laboratory module. CubeSats are frequently created by students as part of university science orengineering projects and include missions such as collecting wide angle imagery of the Earth, testing orbital radio communications, monitoring the Earth’s magnetic field, and exploring the Earth’s surrounding radiations. Depending on the exact height of their release, CubeSats will re-enter the Earth’s atmosphere on the time scale of months to years.
NASA APOD 06-Jan-2014