Bright spots with no temperature anomaly in infrared increase the puzzle about what the bright spots are.
On June 6, 2015, NASA/JPL released a new image from the DAWN spacecraft at the lowest altitude to date: 2,700 miles above the surface. Triangular patterns of bright spots and no temperature anomaly in infrared increase the puzzle about what the bright spots are. Next closest altitude will be 932 miles by early September. Stay tuned for more Earthfiles News updates.
Gold arrow points at one of two triangular patterns of bright spots
in the Ceres crater where brightness 40 times background has persisted for
at least ten years since the Hubble Telescope’s blurry image of Ceres
in 2004 showed the same bright crater. This June 6, 2015, image
was taken by the NASA/JPL Dawn spacecraft in its lower June orbit
of 2,700 miles above the Ceres surface.
2 comments
2 Comments
Claude Limberger
June 25, 2015, 3:29 amIt is weird that a low res camera is the device on the spacecraft taking these pictures, especially with the technology available today. Spend lots of money to go there but don’t spend the extra money on a good camera?
REPLYSebastien Martin@Claude Limberger
June 23, 2016, 2:10 amWhere is the follow-up video to show the new resolution of the crater? Linda was mentioning it in her video here. Also, if there are bright metallic structures in these craters, we can assume that these are ancient structures no longer in use of the average temperature emanating from them is the same as its environment.
REPLY