by Chris Peterson » Fri May 23, 2014 4:27 pm
MarkBour wrote:I noticed that today (+/- 1) is listed as the "rendezvous" date in some of the materials describing this mission.
That's confusing, isn't it? I think that what they are calling the "rendezvous" would be better described as the beginning of the rendezvous phase. The 21 May deceleration burn created the largest delta-V of any planned maneuvers. It began the process of putting the spacecraft in orbit.
Today's APOD ends with an image on May 4, about 19 days ago. You can clearly see the comet waking up and getting close. But if the Rosetta craft has now truly "reached" the comet, how long does it take for images to get here and to be processed for the awaiting public?
It hasn't reached the comet. Currently, the spacecraft is 27 light minutes from Earth (and 3 light seconds from the comet). ESA decides how quickly data is released, but it's generally almost immediately.
[quote="MarkBour"]I noticed that today (+/- 1) is listed as the "rendezvous" date in some of the materials describing this mission.[/quote]
That's confusing, isn't it? I think that what they are calling the "rendezvous" would be better described as the beginning of the rendezvous phase. The 21 May deceleration burn created the largest delta-V of any planned maneuvers. It began the process of putting the spacecraft in orbit.
[quote]Today's APOD ends with an image on May 4, about 19 days ago. You can clearly see the comet waking up and getting close. But if the Rosetta craft has now truly "reached" the comet, how long does it take for images to get here and to be processed for the awaiting public?[/quote]
It hasn't reached the comet. Currently, the spacecraft is 27 light minutes from Earth (and 3 light seconds from the comet). ESA decides how quickly data is released, but it's generally almost immediately.