by iamlucky13 » Sat Jun 23, 2007 12:27 am
In addition to what the others noted, which explains most of the reason, almost all of the pictures that Hubble takes of objects in our solar system are taken with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera. This is a slightly lower resolution, lower sensitivity instrument compared to the Advanced Camera for Surveys. The WFPC has a resolution of 0.043 arcseconds per pixel, while the ACS has a resolution of 0.025 arcseconds per pixel. It's not a huge difference, but it is notable.
If I understand right, the ACS is too sensitive for exposures of objects in the inner solar system, although the demand for using it for deep space observations may also be a factor.
The primary benefit of the Hubble, by the way, is not that it has better resolution than telescopes on the ground, but rather that it has better sensitivity, can take longer exposures (since it can remain pointed at the same object almost 24/7 as desired), and doesn't have to deal with portions of the spectrum being blocked by the atmosphere.
Irregardless, the Dawn mission will be blowing away everything we know about these two bodies in just a couple more years. Aside from Pluto and Eris, which are much further away, Ceres is the only major body in our solar system that hasn't had a decently close study by a probe. We should be able to figure out what's up with the funny colors on Ceres, too.
In addition to what the others noted, which explains most of the reason, almost all of the pictures that Hubble takes of objects in our solar system are taken with the Wide Field and Planetary Camera. This is a slightly lower resolution, lower sensitivity instrument compared to the Advanced Camera for Surveys. The WFPC has a resolution of 0.043 arcseconds per pixel, while the ACS has a resolution of 0.025 arcseconds per pixel. It's not a huge difference, but it is notable.
If I understand right, the ACS is too sensitive for exposures of objects in the inner solar system, although the demand for using it for deep space observations may also be a factor.
The primary benefit of the Hubble, by the way, is not that it has better resolution than telescopes on the ground, but rather that it has better sensitivity, can take longer exposures (since it can remain pointed at the same object almost 24/7 as desired), and doesn't have to deal with portions of the spectrum being blocked by the atmosphere.
Irregardless, the Dawn mission will be blowing away everything we know about these two bodies in just a couple more years. Aside from Pluto and Eris, which are much further away, Ceres is the only major body in our solar system that hasn't had a decently close study by a probe. We should be able to figure out what's up with the funny colors on Ceres, too.