NASA's Dawn spacecraft is set to reach in early June its new, final orbit which will be less than 50 kilometres above the surface of the inner solar system's only dwarf planet — 10 times closer than the spacecraft has ever been.
Soon after, it will begin collecting images and other science data, and that very low orbit will also garner some of Dawn's closest images yet, NASA said on Thursday.
The spacecraft will collect gamma ray and neutron spectra, which help scientists understand variations in the chemical makeup of Ceres' uppermost layer.
"The team is eagerly awaiting the detailed composition and high-resolution imaging from the new, up-close examination," said Dawn's Principal Investigator Carol Raymond of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California.
Representational Image, VOA
"These new high-resolution data allow us to test theories formulated from the previous data sets and discover new features of this fascinating dwarf planet," Raymond added.
Dawn was launched in 2007 and has been exploring the two largest bodies in the main asteroid belt, Vesta and Ceres, to uncover new insights into our solar system. It entered Ceres' orbit in March 2015.
The transfer from Dawn's previous orbit to its final one is not as simple as making a lane change.
Dawn's operations team worked for months to plot the course for this second extended mission of the spacecraft, which is propelled by an ion engine.
Engineers mapped out more than 45,000 possible trajectories before devising a plan that will allow the best science observations, NASA said. (IANS)