nd exosphere, to better understand the origin and evolution
The image was taken at 23:44:12 UTC by the Mercury Transfer Module’s Monitoring Camera 2, when the spacecraft was about 2418 km from Mercury. Closest approach of about 199 km took place shortly before, at 23:34 UTC. In this view, north is towards the lower right. The cameras provide black-and-white snapshots in 1024 x 1024 pixel resolution.
The region shown is part of Mercury’s northern hemisphere including Sihtu Planitia that has been flooded by lavas. A round area smoother and brighter than its surroundings characterizes the plains around the Calvino crater, which are called the Rudaki Plains. The 166 km-wide Lermontov crater is also seen, which looks bright because it contains features unique to Mercury called ‘hollows’ where volatile elements are escaping to space. It also contains a vent where volcanic explosions have occurred. BepiColombo will study these types of features once in orbit around the planet.
More details and images will be provided later today.
The gravity assist maneuver was the first at Mercury and the fourth
of nine flybys overall. During its seven-year cruise to the smallest and
innermost planet of the Solar System, BepiColombo makes one flyby at
Earth, two at Venus and six at Mercury to help steer on course for
Mercury orbit in 2025. The Mercury Transfer Module carries two science
orbiters: ESA’s Mercury Planetary Orbiter and JAXA’s Mercury
Magnetospheric Orbiter, which from complementary orbits will study all
aspects of mysterious Mercury from its core to surface processes,
magnetic field and exosphere, to better understand the origin and
evolution of a planet close to its parent star.
https://vocus.cc/article/61be7ba2fd89780001c8103e
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