Refiner of Gold Creations'

Solar System -- Asteroids

The First Asteroid Studied Close-Up
951 Gaspra
  • Speculation that asteroids were similar to the moons of Mars persisted throughout the 1970s and 1980s.
    • Asteroids are now calculated to have broken from larger "parent asteroids."
  • In November 1991, Gaspra became the first asteroid photographed up close:
    • The picture was returned to Earth by the Galileo spacecraft.
    • Galileo was 16,000 km or 10,000 miles from the asteroid.
    • Prior to this flight, Gaspra was an obscure asteroid in the main belt.
    • Galileo's path was chosen to make an encounter with the asteroid.
    • Gaspra became the focus once astronomer's knew that Galileo would obtain data from close range.
    • Spectra obtained of Gaspra from the Mauna Kea Observatory in Hawaii aided in the course adjustments of Galileo.
    • Features indicative of olivine and pyroxene type minerals suggested that Gaspra had once melted.
    • Gaspra may well have been a mantle-fragment of a larger asteroid.
  • Gaspra's rotation was determined to be 7 hours by the spectra.
  • The dimensions for Gaspra were established at 20 x 12 x 11 km (12 x 7.5 x 7 miles).
  • Photographs of Gaspra also revealed fewer craters than consistent with 4-billion-year-old surfaces of many bodies.

~ | ~ Flyby Ceres ~ | ~ Flyby Vesta ~ | ~ Flyby Hektor ~ | ~ Flyby 1221 Amor ~ | ~
~ | ~ Flyby 1862 Apollo ~ | ~ Flyby Castalia & Toutatis ~ | ~ Flyby 1991 BA ~ | ~
~ | ~ Forward to Jupiter ~ | ~ Back to Mars ~ | ~ Back to Asteroids ~ | ~
~ | ~ Return to Solar System ~ | ~ Lexicon of Astronomy ~ | ~ Planetary Statistics ~ | ~
Refiner of Gold Creations
1998 Solar System Facts
Created by EMC on 6/23/1997. Updated 5/4/2005.